Cristina Rocha is a Senior Research Assistant at the Centre for Cultural Research at the University of Western Sydney, where she received her PhD in 2003.
關鍵詞
Soto Zenshu; Kaikyoshi; Japanese Brazilian community; zazenless Zen; conflicts
摘要
In this paper, I discuss the establishment of Sõtõ Zenshð missions in Brazil. I contend that the discourse on Zen that emerged from the writings of D. T. Suzuki and the Kyoto School to resist Western cultural hegemony not only fed the Zen boom in the West, but has more recently impacted on the Zen practice of some Japanese. I show that Japanese Sõtõshð kaikyõshi who catered to the (mostly) non-Japanese Brazilian community since 1968 embraced Suzuki’s ideas on Zen wholeheartedly in Japan, prior to their arrival in Brazil. Thus, while these kaikyõshi praised zazen as the main Zen practice, others, who catered for Japanese-Brazilians, favored devotional practices. Their diametrically opposing attitudes towards zazen and rituals created conμicts, which were mirrored in their congregation. Here I will present the kaikyõshi side of the conμicts and their evolution through the years to reveal the way the Japanese- Brazilian and non-Japanese communities negotiated their place in the Busshinji temple in São Paulo city.