Sherry Chayat

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Sherry Chayat

Information
Born: 1943
Place of birth: Brooklyn, New York
Religion: Zen Buddhism
School(s): Rinzai
Workplace: Zen Center of Syracuse
Education: Vassar College
Occupation: Roshi
Predecessor(s): Eido Tai Shimano
Website

Portal:Buddhism

Roko Ni-Osho Sherry Chayat (b. 1943) is the first woman in the United States to have received Dharma transmission in the Rinzai school, though Maurine Stuart had received the unofficial title of roshi from Soen Nakagawa previously. She is the guiding teacher of the Zen Center of Syracuse (temple name Hoen-ji), where Tibetan Buddhism and Zen Buddhism are practiced. She is an advocate for the use of meditation in medical settings, with Hoen-ji running the program Well/Being Contemplative Practices for Healing for healthcare professionals.[1]

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[edit] Biography

Sherry Chayat was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1943 and grew up in New Mexico and New Jersey. She read her first book on Zen Buddhism while in the eighth grade, and decided she would one day study it abroad. During the 1960s, while attending college at Vassar College, she began an informal study of Buddhism by reading works by D.T. Suzuki, Alan Watts, and many others. She studied art at the New York Studio School for Drawing and Painting. In 1967 she joined the Zen Studies Society in New York, training under Eido Tai Shimano, Haku'un Yasutani and Soen Nakagawa—and was married to Lou Nordstrom by Shimano and Yasutani. She received lay ordination from Maurine Stuart—receiving the Dharma name Roko (meaning sparkling dew)—and then was ordained a priest by Shimano. In 1992 she was recognized as a teacher and then received inka in 1994 from Shimano.[1][2]

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[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Keller et al, 642-643
  2. ^ Zen Master Who?, 117-119

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