Articles by alphabetic order
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 Ā Ī Ñ Ś Ū Ö Ō
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0


Difference between revisions of "Robert Baker Aitken"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Line 3: Line 3:
  
  
'''[[Robert Baker Dairyu Chotan Aitken Rōshi]]''' (June 19, 1917 – August 5, 2010) was a [[Zen teacher]] in the Harada-Yasutani [[lineage]].  
+
'''[[Robert Baker Dairyu Chotan Aitken Rōshi]]''' (June 19, 1917 – August 5, 2010) was a [[Zen teacher]] in the [[Harada-Yasutani]] [[lineage]].  
  
He co-founded the [[Honolulu]] [[Diamond]] [[Sangha]] in 1959 together with his wife. [[Aitken]] received [[Dharma transmission]] from Koun Yamada in 1985 but decided to live as a [[layperson]].  
+
He co-founded the [[Honolulu]] [[Diamond Sangha]] in 1959 together with his wife. [[Aitken]] received [[Dharma transmission]] from [[Koun Yamada]] in 1985 but decided to live as a [[layperson]].  
  
 
He was a {{Wiki|social}} activist advocating for {{Wiki|social}} justice for gays, women and Native Hawaiians throughout his [[life]], and was one of the original founders of the [[Buddhist Peace Fellowship]].
 
He was a {{Wiki|social}} activist advocating for {{Wiki|social}} justice for gays, women and Native Hawaiians throughout his [[life]], and was one of the original founders of the [[Buddhist Peace Fellowship]].
Line 15: Line 15:
  
  
[[Robert Aitken]] was born in [[Philadelphia]], Pennsylvania in 1917, then was raised in Hawaii from the age of five.
+
[[Robert Aitken]] was born in [[Philadelphia]], [[Pennsylvania]] in 1917, then was raised in [[Hawaii]] from the age of five.
  
Living in Guam as a civilian working construction—at the onset of [[World]] [[War]] II—he was detained by the [[Japanese]] and held in internment camps for the duration of the [[war]]. In one such internment camp in [[Kobe]], [[Japan]] in 1944 he met the [[scholar]] [[Reginald Horace Blyth]], with whom he had frequent discussions on [[Zen Buddhism]] and anarchism. At the conclusion of the [[war]] he returned to Hawaii and obtained a BA in English {{Wiki|literature}} and an MA in [[Japanese]] from the {{Wiki|University of Hawaii}}.
+
Living in Guam as a civilian working construction—at the onset of [[World War II]]—he was detained by the [[Japanese]] and held in internment camps for the duration of the [[war]].  
  
In the late 1940s, while going to classes briefly at the {{Wiki|University of California}} in [[Berkeley]], [[California]], he met [[Nyogen Senzaki]]. Originally in [[California]] hoping for an encounter with [[Wikipedia:Jiddu Krishnamurti|Krishnamurti]], he began to study with Senzaki in [[Los Angeles]]. It was during this period that his commitment to {{Wiki|social}} issues - such as {{Wiki|pacifism}} and labor rights - became more {{Wiki|vocal}}. As a result of his advocacy, he was investigated during this period by the FBI.
+
In one such internment camp in [[Kobe]], [[Japan]] in 1944 he met the [[scholar]] [[Reginald Horace Blyth]], with whom he had frequent discussions on [[Zen Buddhism]] and [[anarchism]].  
  
In 1950 he went back to [[Japan]], under a grant to study haiku and followed Senzaki's recommendation that he study [[Zen]] there. There he took part in his first [[sesshin]] at [[Engaku-ji]], a [[temple]] in [[Wikipedia:Kamakura, Kanagawa|Kamakura]], [[Japan]]. Soon after, he met [[Nakagawa]] [[Soen]], who convinced him to come for a stay at Ryutakuji for the next seven months. During this period [[Soen]] took over for the ailing [[abbot]] of the [[temple]], [[Yamamoto]] Gempo. [[Aitken]] then came down with a case of dysentery, and returned home to Hawaii. He [[married]] his second wife Anne Hopkins in 1957 and made occasional trips back to [[Japan]]. In 1957 [[Aitken]] met [[Hakuun Yasutani]] and sat with him for the first time.
+
At the conclusion of the [[war]] he returned to [[Hawaii]] and obtained a BA in English {{Wiki|literature}} and an MA in [[Japanese]] from the {{Wiki|University of Hawaii}}.
  
In 1959 he and Anne began a [[meditation]] group in [[Honolulu]] at their residence, which became known as the Koko-an [[zendo]]. The {{Wiki|community}} that [[gathered]] at this [[zendo]] were then named the [[Diamond]] [[Sangha]] by the two. The [[Diamond]] [[Sangha]] has affiliate [[zen centers]] in {{Wiki|South America}}, [[Australia]], [[New Zealand]], the [[Wikipedia:United States of America (USA)|United States]] and {{Wiki|Europe}} and is known for making the rigors of [[traditional]] [[Zen]] accessible to lay practitioners.
+
In the late 1940s, while going to classes briefly at the {{Wiki|University of California}} in [[Berkeley]], [[California]], he met [[Nyogen Senzaki]]. Originally in [[California]] hoping for an encounter with [[Wikipedia:Jiddu Krishnamurti|Krishnamurti]], he began to study with [[Senzaki]] in [[Los Angeles]].  
  
In 1960 [[Soen Nakagawa]] [[Roshi]] asked young [[monk]] Eido Tai Shimano to travel to [[Honolulu]] to assist [[Diamond]] [[Sangha]] center established by Anne and {{Wiki|Robert Aitken}}.
+
It was during this period that his commitment to {{Wiki|social}} issues - such as {{Wiki|pacifism}} and labor rights - became more {{Wiki|vocal}}. As a result of his advocacy, he was investigated during this period by the FBI.
  
In 1961, [[Aitken]] made an extended stay in [[Japan]] to study under [[Haku'un Yasutani]], eventually ending his studies with [[Soen]]. He then worked in various capacities at the East-West [[Center]] and the {{Wiki|University of Hawaii}} until 1969, when he and Anne moved to Maui, Hawaii to found the Maui [[Zendo]] in Haiku-Pauwela. Koun Yamada [[Rōshi]] was invited to lead the [[Diamond]] [[Sangha]] and he moved to Hawaii in 1971. In 1974 [[Aitken]] was given permission to teach by Koun Yamada, receiving full [[Dharma transmission]] from him in 1985.
+
In 1950 he went back to [[Japan]], under a grant to study haiku and followed [[Senzaki's]] recommendation that he study [[Zen]] there.
 +
 
 +
There he took part in his first [[sesshin]] at [[Engaku-ji]], a [[temple]] in [[Wikipedia:Kamakura, Kanagawa|Kamakura]], [[Japan]].
 +
 
 +
Soon after, he met [[Nakagawa]] [[Soen]], who convinced him to come for a stay at Ryutakuji for the next seven months. During this period [[Soen]] took over for the ailing [[abbot]] of the [[temple]], [[Yamamoto Gempo]].
 +
 
 +
[[Aitken]] then came down with a case of dysentery, and returned home to [[Hawaii]].
 +
 
 +
He [[married]] his second wife Anne Hopkins in 1957 and made occasional trips back to [[Japan]].
 +
 
 +
In 1957 [[Aitken]] met [[Hakuun Yasutani]] and sat with him for the first time.
 +
 
 +
In 1959 he and Anne began a [[meditation]] group in [[Honolulu]] at their residence, which became known as the [[Koko-an zendo]].
 +
 
 +
The {{Wiki|community}} that [[gathered]] at this [[zendo]] were then named the [[Diamond]] [[Sangha]] by the two.
 +
 
 +
The [[Diamond Sangha]] has affiliate [[zen centers]] in {{Wiki|South America}}, [[Australia]], [[New Zealand]], the [[Wikipedia:United States of America (USA)|United States]] and {{Wiki|Europe}} and is known for making the rigors of [[traditional]] [[Zen]] accessible to lay practitioners.
 +
 
 +
In 1960 [[Soen Nakagawa]] [[Roshi]] asked young [[monk]] [[Eido Tai Shimano]] to travel to [[Honolulu]] to assist [[Diamond Sangha]] center established by Anne and {{Wiki|Robert Aitken}}.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
In 1961, [[Aitken]] made an extended stay in [[Japan]] to study under [[Haku'un Yasutani]], eventually ending his studies with [[Soen]].  
 +
 
 +
He then worked in various capacities at the East-West [[Center]] and the {{Wiki|University of Hawaii}} until 1969, when he and Anne moved to [[Maui]], [[Hawaii]] to found the [[Maui Zendo]] in [[Haiku-Pauwela]].  
 +
 
 +
[[Koun Yamada]] [[Rōshi]] was invited to lead the [[Diamond Sangha]] and he moved to Hawaii in 1971.  
 +
 
 +
In 1974 [[Aitken]] was given permission to teach by Koun Yamada, receiving full [[Dharma transmission]] from him in 1985.
 +
 
 +
[[Robert Aitken]] was a {{Wiki|social}} activist through much of his adult [[life]], beginning with against nuclear testing during the 1940s. H
 +
 
 +
e was an outspoken critic of the [[Vietnam War]], and became a strong opponent of the nuclear arms race between the [[Wikipedia:United States of America (USA)|United States]] and the {{Wiki|Soviet Union}}.
 +
 
 +
He was among the earlier proponents of deep {{Wiki|ecology}} in [[religious]] [[America]], and was outspoken in his [[beliefs]] on the equality of men and women.
 +
 
 +
In 1978 [[Aitken]] helped found the [[Buddhist Peace Fellowship]], an [[organization]] that advocates for conflict resolution globally.
 +
 
 +
[[Aitken Roshi]] [[died]] after a brief bout with pneumonia on August 5, 2010 in [[Honolulu]], O'ahu, [[Hawai'i]].
  
{{Wiki|Robert Aitken}} was a {{Wiki|social}} activist through much of his adult [[life]], beginning with against nuclear testing during the 1940s. He was an outspoken critic of the [[Vietnam]] [[War]], and became a strong opponent of the nuclear arms race between the [[Wikipedia:United States of America (USA)|United States]] and the {{Wiki|Soviet Union}}. He was among the earlier proponents of deep {{Wiki|ecology}} in [[religious]] [[America]], and was outspoken in his [[beliefs]] on the equality of men and women. In 1978 [[Aitken]] helped found the [[Buddhist Peace Fellowship]], an [[organization]] that advocates for conflict resolution globally.
 
  
[[Aitken]] [[Roshi]] [[died]] after a brief bout with pneumonia on August 5, 2010 in [[Honolulu]], O'ahu, Hawai'i.
 
  
 
==[[Dharma heirs]]==
 
==[[Dharma heirs]]==
 +
 +
  
 
{{Wiki|Robert Aitken}} appointed a number of successors, several of whom also appointed successors:
 
{{Wiki|Robert Aitken}} appointed a number of successors, several of whom also appointed successors:
  
::1)Alcalde, Augusto Nyo'ei Gen'un [[Roshi]] (b. 1950). [[Teacher]] at the [[Vimalakirti]] [[Sangha]], Shobo-an, Cordoba, [[Argentina]], and a ::visiting [[teacher]] at the {{Wiki|Melbourne}} [[Zen]] Group, {{Wiki|Melbourne}}, [[Australia]]. In April/March 2001 he has formally resigned from the ::[[Diamond]] [[Sangha]], has discontinued most of his [[teaching]] engagements and has given up the use of the title "[[Roshi]]."
+
::1)Alcalde, Augusto Nyo'ei Gen'un [[Roshi]] (b. 1950). [[Teacher]] at the [[Vimalakirti Sangha]], [[Shobo-an]], [[Cordoba]], [[Argentina]], and a ::visiting [[teacher]] at the {{Wiki|Melbourne}} [[Zen]] Group, {{Wiki|Melbourne}}, [[Australia]].  
 +
 
 +
In April/March 2001 he has formally resigned from the ::[[Diamond]] [[Sangha]], has discontinued most of his [[teaching]] engagements and has given up the use of the title "[[Roshi]]."
 +
 
 +
 
 
::2)Barzaghi, Subhana, [[Gyo]] [[Shin]], Myo-Un-An [[Roshi]] (7 Aug 1954-). Also a [[teacher]] appointed by John Tarrant.
 
::2)Barzaghi, Subhana, [[Gyo]] [[Shin]], Myo-Un-An [[Roshi]] (7 Aug 1954-). Also a [[teacher]] appointed by John Tarrant.
 +
 
::3)Bobrow, Joseph. [[Teacher]] at the Deep Streams [[Zen]] Institute (formerly known as The Harbour [[Sangha]]), [[San Francisco]], US]
 
::3)Bobrow, Joseph. [[Teacher]] at the Deep Streams [[Zen]] Institute (formerly known as The Harbour [[Sangha]]), [[San Francisco]], US]
 
::4)Bolleter, Ross [[Roshi]] (18 Jul 1946-). Also received [[Transmission]] from J. Tarrant. [[Teacher]] at the [[Zen]] Group of [[Western]] ::[[Australia]], {{Wiki|Perth}}, [[Australia]]. [[Teacher]] at the Maitai [[Zendo]] Nelson, [[New Zealand]].
 
::4)Bolleter, Ross [[Roshi]] (18 Jul 1946-). Also received [[Transmission]] from J. Tarrant. [[Teacher]] at the [[Zen]] Group of [[Western]] ::[[Australia]], {{Wiki|Perth}}, [[Australia]]. [[Teacher]] at the Maitai [[Zendo]] Nelson, [[New Zealand]].
 +
 
:::1.Jaksch, Mary Jise [[Roshi]] (1947-). [[Teacher]] at the Maitai [[Zendo]], Nelson, NZ
 
:::1.Jaksch, Mary Jise [[Roshi]] (1947-). [[Teacher]] at the Maitai [[Zendo]], Nelson, NZ
 
:::2.Murphy, Susan Myo Sei Ryu'un An [[Roshi]] (17 Jun 1950-). The partner of Ross Bolleter. In 2001 she also received ::[[Transmission]] from J. Tarrant. The founding [[teacher]] of [[Zen]] Open Circle group in {{Wiki|Sydney}}, [[Australia]] 9. Together with Subhana ::Barzaghi, [[teacher]] of the {{Wiki|Melbourne}} [[Zen]] Group since 2001.
 
:::2.Murphy, Susan Myo Sei Ryu'un An [[Roshi]] (17 Jun 1950-). The partner of Ross Bolleter. In 2001 she also received ::[[Transmission]] from J. Tarrant. The founding [[teacher]] of [[Zen]] Open Circle group in {{Wiki|Sydney}}, [[Australia]] 9. Together with Subhana ::Barzaghi, [[teacher]] of the {{Wiki|Melbourne}} [[Zen]] Group since 2001.
 +
 
:::3.Sweetman, Ian. [[Teacher]] at the [[Zen]] Group of {{Wiki|Western Australia}}, {{Wiki|Perth}}, [[Australia]].
 
:::3.Sweetman, Ian. [[Teacher]] at the [[Zen]] Group of {{Wiki|Western Australia}}, {{Wiki|Perth}}, [[Australia]].
 +
 
:::4.Joyner, Robert G. [[Roshi]] (9 Apr 1937-). [[Teacher]] at the Adelaide [[Zen]] Group in Adelaide, [[South]] [[Australia]].
 
:::4.Joyner, Robert G. [[Roshi]] (9 Apr 1937-). [[Teacher]] at the Adelaide [[Zen]] Group in Adelaide, [[South]] [[Australia]].
 
::5)Henry, Michael Danan [[Roshi]] (b. 1939-). This appointment follows that by [[Philip Kapleau]]. [[Teacher]] at the Denver [[Zen Center]]  
 
::5)Henry, Michael Danan [[Roshi]] (b. 1939-). This appointment follows that by [[Philip Kapleau]]. [[Teacher]] at the Denver [[Zen Center]]  

Latest revision as of 02:24, 14 February 2016

Robert Baker Aitken and Anne Hopkins Aitken.JPG


Robert Baker Dairyu Chotan Aitken Rōshi (June 19, 1917 – August 5, 2010) was a Zen teacher in the Harada-Yasutani lineage.

He co-founded the Honolulu Diamond Sangha in 1959 together with his wife. Aitken received Dharma transmission from Koun Yamada in 1985 but decided to live as a layperson.

He was a social activist advocating for social justice for gays, women and Native Hawaiians throughout his life, and was one of the original founders of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship.


Biography

Robert Aitken was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1917, then was raised in Hawaii from the age of five.

Living in Guam as a civilian working construction—at the onset of World War II—he was detained by the Japanese and held in internment camps for the duration of the war.

In one such internment camp in Kobe, Japan in 1944 he met the scholar Reginald Horace Blyth, with whom he had frequent discussions on Zen Buddhism and anarchism.

At the conclusion of the war he returned to Hawaii and obtained a BA in English literature and an MA in Japanese from the University of Hawaii.

In the late 1940s, while going to classes briefly at the University of California in Berkeley, California, he met Nyogen Senzaki. Originally in California hoping for an encounter with Krishnamurti, he began to study with Senzaki in Los Angeles.

It was during this period that his commitment to social issues - such as pacifism and labor rights - became more vocal. As a result of his advocacy, he was investigated during this period by the FBI.

In 1950 he went back to Japan, under a grant to study haiku and followed Senzaki's recommendation that he study Zen there.

There he took part in his first sesshin at Engaku-ji, a temple in Kamakura, Japan.

Soon after, he met Nakagawa Soen, who convinced him to come for a stay at Ryutakuji for the next seven months. During this period Soen took over for the ailing abbot of the temple, Yamamoto Gempo.

Aitken then came down with a case of dysentery, and returned home to Hawaii.

He married his second wife Anne Hopkins in 1957 and made occasional trips back to Japan.

In 1957 Aitken met Hakuun Yasutani and sat with him for the first time.

In 1959 he and Anne began a meditation group in Honolulu at their residence, which became known as the Koko-an zendo.

The community that gathered at this zendo were then named the Diamond Sangha by the two.

The Diamond Sangha has affiliate zen centers in South America, Australia, New Zealand, the United States and Europe and is known for making the rigors of traditional Zen accessible to lay practitioners.

In 1960 Soen Nakagawa Roshi asked young monk Eido Tai Shimano to travel to Honolulu to assist Diamond Sangha center established by Anne and Robert Aitken.


In 1961, Aitken made an extended stay in Japan to study under Haku'un Yasutani, eventually ending his studies with Soen.

He then worked in various capacities at the East-West Center and the University of Hawaii until 1969, when he and Anne moved to Maui, Hawaii to found the Maui Zendo in Haiku-Pauwela.

Koun Yamada Rōshi was invited to lead the Diamond Sangha and he moved to Hawaii in 1971.

In 1974 Aitken was given permission to teach by Koun Yamada, receiving full Dharma transmission from him in 1985.

Robert Aitken was a social activist through much of his adult life, beginning with against nuclear testing during the 1940s. H

e was an outspoken critic of the Vietnam War, and became a strong opponent of the nuclear arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union.

He was among the earlier proponents of deep ecology in religious America, and was outspoken in his beliefs on the equality of men and women.

In 1978 Aitken helped found the Buddhist Peace Fellowship, an organization that advocates for conflict resolution globally.

Aitken Roshi died after a brief bout with pneumonia on August 5, 2010 in Honolulu, O'ahu, Hawai'i.


Dharma heirs

Robert Aitken appointed a number of successors, several of whom also appointed successors:

1)Alcalde, Augusto Nyo'ei Gen'un Roshi (b. 1950). Teacher at the Vimalakirti Sangha, Shobo-an, Cordoba, Argentina, and a ::visiting teacher at the Melbourne Zen Group, Melbourne, Australia.

In April/March 2001 he has formally resigned from the ::Diamond Sangha, has discontinued most of his teaching engagements and has given up the use of the title "Roshi."


2)Barzaghi, Subhana, Gyo Shin, Myo-Un-An Roshi (7 Aug 1954-). Also a teacher appointed by John Tarrant.
3)Bobrow, Joseph. Teacher at the Deep Streams Zen Institute (formerly known as The Harbour Sangha), San Francisco, US]
4)Bolleter, Ross Roshi (18 Jul 1946-). Also received Transmission from J. Tarrant. Teacher at the Zen Group of Western ::Australia, Perth, Australia. Teacher at the Maitai Zendo Nelson, New Zealand.
1.Jaksch, Mary Jise Roshi (1947-). Teacher at the Maitai Zendo, Nelson, NZ
2.Murphy, Susan Myo Sei Ryu'un An Roshi (17 Jun 1950-). The partner of Ross Bolleter. In 2001 she also received ::Transmission from J. Tarrant. The founding teacher of Zen Open Circle group in Sydney, Australia 9. Together with Subhana ::Barzaghi, teacher of the Melbourne Zen Group since 2001.
3.Sweetman, Ian. Teacher at the Zen Group of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.
4.Joyner, Robert G. Roshi (9 Apr 1937-). Teacher at the Adelaide Zen Group in Adelaide, South Australia.
5)Henry, Michael Danan Roshi (b. 1939-). This appointment follows that by Philip Kapleau. Teacher at the Denver Zen Center
1.Kempe, Karin Sensei. Teacher at the Denver Zen Center. In 2008 the Head of Zendo at Zen Center of Denver.
2.Morgareidge, Ken Sensei. Teacher at the Denver Zen Center 8. In 2005-2007 the Head of Zendo at Zen Center of Denver.
3.Sheehan, Peggy Sensei. Teacher at the Denver Zen Center 8. In 2001-2005 the Head of Zendo at Zen Center of Denver.
6)Dawson, Geoff. Assistant teacher within R. Aitken Line, gone independent. Following the separation from R. Aitken Roshi ::and J. Tarrant Roshi, Geoff Dawson became, in late 1990s, a student of Joko Beck Roshi. Received Dharma Transmission from ::Joko Beck in 2003 5. Teacher at the Ordinary Mind Zen School Sydney, Australia.
7)Drosten, Rolf Rev. Roshi. Teacher at the Leverkusen Zen Group, also known as the "Wolken und Mond Sangha" (Clouds and Moon ::Sangha), Leverkusen, Germany.
1.Haffer-Penther, Amelie. Apprentice teacher.
2.Jung, Franz Xaver Roshi.
3.Zill, Burkard Roshi.
8)Duffy, Jack Kenzan Kan'un Ken Roshi (b. 1951-). Teacher at the Three Treasures Sangha, Seattle, US.
1.Zeedyk, Jana (b. 1953-) Associate teacher
9)Foster, Nelson (b. 1951-). Teacher at the Ring of Bone Zendo, California, and at the Honolulu Diamond Sangha, Hawaii, US.
1.Kieran, Michael. Co-teacher at the Honolulu Diamond Sangha, Hawaii, US.
10)Hawk, Pat Seisho Shin'un Fr. Roshi (1942-2012). Teacher at the Zen Desert Sangha, Tucson, AZ US. Teacher at the Mountain ::Cloud Zen Center, Santa Fe, NM, US.
1.Dorsey, Dan Roshi. Teacher at the Zen Desert Sangha, Tucson, AZ US.
2.Larson, Kristen Roshi. Teacher at the North Olympic Sangha (NO Sangha), Port Angeles, US.
3.Marcel, Leonard Roshi
4.Dharan, Saudi Arabia, Guest Teacher at the Leverkusen Zen Group, Germany]
5.Saalfeld, Joan SNJM
6.Walker, Robert (Bob) Roshi
1.Sanders, Paul. Assistant teacher
7.Weimar, Susan Roshi. Teacher at the Zen Desert Sangha, Tucson, AZ US, The Flagstaff Zen Group, and Empty Sky Sangha.
11)Gyger, Pia Jinji Sr. Roshi (b. 1940). Teacher at the One Ground Sangha, Luzern, Switzerland.
12)Morgan, Marian. Assistant teacher
13)Steger, Manfred B. (b. 1961-). Assistant teacher, gone independent in mid-1991. Co-teacher, together with his wife, Perle ::Besserman (a Robert Aitken's student, did not receive from Aitken Roshi a sanction to teach) of the Princeton Area Zen ::Group, Princeton NJ, US.
14)Tarrant, John Nanryu Ji'un-ken Roshi (b. 1949). Left the Diamond Sangha in the late 1999. Head and teacher of the ::California Diamond Sangha, an organization renamed in Jan 2000 as the Pacific Zen Institute, US.
1.Barzaghi, Subhana Gyo Shin, Myo-Un-An Roshi (b. 1954). Also received Transmission from Robert Aitken. Teacher (Diamond ::Sangha) at the Sydney Zen Centre, and visiting teacher at the Melbourne Zen Group, Melbourne, Australia.
1.Burke, Sexton (b. 1944-). Assistant teacher. Teacher (Diamond Sangha) at the Sydney Zen Centre, Australia.
2.Coote, Gillian Jitsu Mu Roshi (b. 1944) Teacher (Diamond Sangha) at the Sydney Zen Centre, Australia.
3.Davison, Ellen. Assistant teacher
4.Gluek, Maggie Seiryu. Assistant teacher. Teacher (Diamond Sangha) at the Sydney Zen Centre, Australia.
5.Maloney, Paul (b. 1939-) Assistant teacher. Teacher (Diamond Sangha) at the Sydney Zen Centre, Australia.
2.Bolleter, Ross Roshi (b. 1946-). Also appointed by Robert Aitken.
3.Ford, James Ishmael Zeno Myoun Roshi (b. 1948). Also a Soto teacher appointed by Jiyu Kennett Roshi. Taught at the Desert ::Lotus Zen Sangha, US. An adjunct teacher at the Pacific Zen Institute in Santa Rosa, US, and the teacher at the Boundless ::Way Zen.
1.Blacker, Melissa Keido Myozen Sensei (b. 1954). A co-teacher of the Worcester Zen Sangha, an affiliate organization ::within Boundless Way Zen.
2.Ross, Lanny Sevan Keido Sei'an Sensei (b. 1951). Also holds the Dharma Transmission in the Philip Kapleau lineage ::bestowed on him in 2001 by Bodhin Kjolhede Roshi.
4.Mansfield-Howlett, Rachel. Head teacher at Santa Rosa City Zen, US. Teacher and at the Desert Lotus Zen Sangha in ::Phoenix, CO, US.
5.Murphy, Susan Myo Sei Ryu'un An Roshi (b. 1950-). An adjunct teacher at the Pacific Zen Institute in Santa Rosa, US. Also ::received Transmission from Ross Bolleter.
6.Saint, Deborah. Sensei. A teacher at the Desert Lotus Zen Sangha, Phoenix, AZ. and at the Pacific Zen Institute.
7.Sutherland, Joan Roshi (b. 1954). Co-founder of and teacher at the Pacific Zen Institute, Santa Rosa, guiding teacher of ::the Springs Mountain Sangha in Colorado Springs, CO. and a teacher of the Mountain Cloud Zen Center, Santa Fe, US.
1.Bender, Sarah Masland Sensei (b. 1948). A resident teacher for the Springs Mountain Sangha in Colorado Springs, CO., and ::also a Cadet Chapel Buddhist Program Leader at the United States Air Force Academy. A teacher at the Springs Mountain Zendo, ::CO.
2.Palmer, Andrew Sensei (b. 1971).
8.Terragno, Danièl Ki-Nay (b. 1947-) Roshi. Teacher at the 'Rocks & Clouds Zendo', Sebastopol, CA, US. Also, the visiting ::teacher for the Yellow Springs Dharma Centre and the Columbus Zen Corner in Ohio, and in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
1.Parekh, Antoinette Kenjo Shin (b. 1959) Apprentice teacher.
9.Twentyman, Craig. Independent teacher
10.Weinstein, David Onryu Ko'un (b. 1949-) Roshi. The guiding teacher of the Oakland Zendo of the Pacific Zen Institute. ::The guiding teacher of the Fair Oaks Sangha, Menlo Park, Ca., an affiliate of the Pacific Zen Institute. A teacher of the ::Springs Mountain Sangha, Colorado Springs, CO.

Bibliography

Source

Wikipedia:Robert Baker Aitken