Feeding the Hungry Spirits
An Interview with Bernard Glassman, Roshi
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Bernie Glassman began his Zen studies in 1967.
Being concerned with issues of social action and the integration of Zen
practice with everyday life, Roshi Bernie founded the Greyston Mandala.
He talks with us about his spiritual and interfaith journey as well as
his Peacemaker Community work. |
Integral Yoga Magazine:
Please tell us about your spiritual journey. |
Bernie Glassman: I actually
consider myself both Buddhist and Jewish. They were parallel paths.
For a period, I was more Jewish. For a period, I was more Buddhist.
Then, I was pretty much both. I also started to do some studies in other
traditions. I took a mantra in the Ramakrishna tradition. I took a name
in the Sufi tradition. I spent time in Catholic monasteries.
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IYM: Was this your own personal
exploration? |
BG: It was less
about seeking and more about feeling drawn toward the different traditions.
But, I was rooted in Zen. |
IYM: What about your practices? Were
you integrating practices from the different traditions, as well, with your Zen
practices? |
BG: My formal practice was really Zen.
Whenever I do a street retreat in New York, I always end up going to a mosque
for one of the days.
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IYM: You were named a Dharma Successor
of Maezumi Roshi? |
BG: I was ordained in the Japanese Soto
sect of Zen. They used the word, "Roshi," for somebody who has remained a
teacher and who is over a certain age. My teacher had 12 Dharma Successors.
I was the first.
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IYM: You are very involved with
peacemaking and engaged spirituality. How did that come about? |
BG: I had a major experience around 1976
in which I felt the sufferings of what I call "the hungry spirits," of all the
sufferings of the world. It was so strong that I made a vow that I would try to
feed all those hungry spirits. It led me to ask, "How do you work?" As a Zen
teacher, I was working with individuals who were interested in Zen practice to
help them realize the oneness of life. My question became, "How do I create
situations, environments, such that all people would move closer to realizing
the interconnectedness of life, the oneness of life?" |
IYM: Can you talk about that development
and the establishment of Greyston? |
BG: Greyston was an experiment in
putting the mandala of Buddhism into society. I translate mandala as "circle
of light." In Buddhist theory, a mandala consists of five energies. I defined
the five energies for the Greyston mandala to be: 1) livelihood or ratna; 2)
social action or karma; 3) study and training or vajra energy; 4) spirituality
or Buddha energy; and 5) relationship and integration, or padma energy.
I had studied theories of mandala and of energy. But I hadn't
seen it actually used as a model in society. That's what Greyston was about. In
Yogaville, you have the businesses, the livelihoods, the trainings, and you have
spiritual practice. You can say that there is a mandala right here and you can
look at the pieces that fit into that mandala.
I was trying to take that and put it into the city of
Yonkers, by bringing a holistic approach to inner-city work. In fact, that is
what we did. Our bakery grew in a way where the bakery wanted to separate out
from the rest of the mandala because it was becoming so successful. That was a
crisis in the development of Greyston. I had to end the crisis by firing the
person in charge. He was extremely successful in helping that bakery become very
strong, but he would have destroyed the model.
I was always asking how one creates an environment in which
people who had been homeless or unemployed, or on drugs would step in and become
part of our life. It wasn't that we were imposing Buddhism or Zen. I was trying
to encourage them to get more involved in their own spiritual tradition,
whatever it was. But I was also looking at techniques to help them see this
interconnectedness of life...
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read the rest of this article in the Summer 2004 issue of IY Magazine
order the Summer 2004 issue now! |