Michael Mugaku Zimmerman | |
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Michael and his wife, Diane Musho Hamilton |
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School | Zen Buddhism |
Lineage | White Plum Asanga |
Personal | |
Nationality | American |
Born | 1943 Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Senior posting | |
Based in | Kanzeon Zen Center |
Title | Sensei Former Chief Justice of the Utah Supreme Court |
Predecessor | Dennis Genpo Merzel |
Religious career | |
Website | http://www.bigmind.org/ |
Michael Zimmerman (born 1943) is a prominent attorney, a former justice of the Utah Supreme Court, and a Zen teacher at Kanzeon Zen Center (KZC) located in Salt Lake City, Utah. He received shiho from his teacher Dennis Genpo Merzel in December 2006. Zimmerman, the former Chief Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, is married to Diane Musho Hamilton (also a sensei at KZC). As a justice he was known for his ethics, receiving in 1994 the "Excellence in Ethics Award" from the Center for the Study of Ethics at Utah Valley State College.[1] Zimmerman had come to Zen Buddhism in 1993 seeking a support system for himself as his first wife Lynne battled terminal cancer. Later, through his work in the courts, he met Diane and began sitting zazen at Kanzeon Zen Center with Merzel under Hamilton's suggestion. The two were married by Merzel in 1998. Zimmerman is currently a practicing attorney for Snell & Wilmer in Salt Lake City. From 1984 to 2000 he served as a Justice for the Utah Supreme Court, and from 1994 to 1998 he acted as Chief Justice.[2]
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Michael Zimmerman was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1943. He attended university at the University of Utah, entering its law school following graduation. After law school, Zimmerman moved to Washington, D.C. and worked as a judicial clerk for Warren E. Burger, then the acting Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. He then moved to Los Angeles, working as a lawyer for O’Melveny & Myers there. Zimmerman moved back to Utah to practice law for a short period, also serving as a special counsel to Utah Governor Scott Milne Matheson part time. At the time of Zimmerman's joining in the Utah Supreme Court majority upholding prayers at government meetings as long as there was no religious restriction on who could give the prayer, Zimmerman was still an Episcopalian.[3]
Zimmerman began a meditation practice in 1993 while his first wife, Lynne Mariani Zimmerman, was suffering a terminal illness. In 1996, at the suggestion of Diane Hamilton, he began sitting zazen at Kanzeon Zen Center. In 1998 he received jukai and was given the Buddhist name of Mugaku ("no learning"). Later that year, he was married by his teacher, Dennis Genpo Merzel, to Diane Musho Hamilton.[2] In December 2006 he received Dharma transmission from Dennis Genpo Merzel,[4] giving him authority to teach Zen to others.[3]
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