Jan Chozen Bays Explained

Jan Chozen Bays
Dharma Name:Chozen
Birth Date:9 August 1945
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Religion:Zen Buddhism
School:Harada-Yasutani
Lineage:White Plum Asanga
Roshi
Location:Oregon, USA
Education:M.D. University of California at San Diego
Predecessor:Taizan Maezumi
Spouse:Hogen Bays
Website:Great Vow Zen MonasteryHeart of Wisdom Zen Temple
Zen Community of Oregon

Jan Chozen Bays (born August 9, 1945), is a Zen teacher, author, mindful eating educator, and pediatrician specializing in work with abused children.

Biography

Jan Chozen Bays was born in Chicago, Illinois on August 9, 1945. She grew up in East Greenbush, New York and spent two years in Korea. She received her undergraduate degree at Swarthmore College and earned her medical degree at the University of California at San Diego, specializing in pediatrics.

Bays began practicing Zen in a group that included Charlotte Joko Beck, Anne Seisen Saunders, and Jerry Shishin Wick in San Diego. She eventually moved to the Zen Center of Los Angeles to study with the Japanese Zen teacher Taizan Maezumi Roshi. She had an extramarital affair with him, which she admitted, which devastated his wife and children. She served as the physician at the Zen Center’s community medical clinic. She was a student of Maezumi from 1977 until his death in 1995. She received dharma transmission from him in 1983 becoming his 4th dharma heir and, after Joko Beck, the second woman.

With her husband Laren Hogen Bays, since 1985 she has been a teacher at the Zen Community of Oregon, a Zen center or sangha in Portland, Oregon.[1] Chozen and Hogen Bays are also co-founders and co-abbots of Great Vow Zen Monastery of Clatskanie, Oregon, which opened in 2002. From 1990 until the present she has trained with Shodo Harada, a Rinzai Zen teacher.[2] [3] In 2011, Bays founded Heart of Wisdom Zen Temple in Portland, Oregon.[4]

Child abuse expert

Bays is a pediatrician and nationally recognized expert on child abuse.[5] In the 1980s and 1990s, she conducted the medical examinations of thousands of infants and children who had been abused or killed and regularly appeared in court as an expert witness.[6] In 1987, she helped to found Child Abuse Response and Evaluation Services (CARES) Northwest, now one of the oldest and largest child abuse assessment centers in the United States.[7]

Bibliography

See also

References

  1. News: Karma: Buddhism's most misunderstood concept . . Nancy . Haught . January 11, 2001.
  2. Before founding Great Vow she was the founder of Larch Mountain Zen Center, also in the Portland area, and prior to that she and Hogen were longtime residents of the LA Zen Center, founded by Maezumi Roshi. Chozen is a pediatrician specializing in child abuse, founded a child abuse clinic in Portland (called CARES) and has lectured on the subject throughout the U.S. and internationally. She is the author of several books. Book: Opening the hand of thought: Foundations of Zen Buddhist Practice . Kosho Uchiyama . Thomas Wright . Jisho Cary Warner . Shohaku Okumura . 2004. Wisdom Publications. 0861713575.
  3. Book: The New Buddhism: The Western Transformation of an Ancient Tradition . James William Coleman. 2002. Oxford University Press. 0195152417.
  4. Web site: Zen Community of Oregon history Zen Community of Oregon. www.zendust.org. 2017-08-24.
  5. Book: Ford, James Ishmael. Zen Master Who?. Wisdom Publications. 2006. 978-0861715091. 169–171. registration.
  6. Book: Bays, Jan Chozen. Jizo Bodhisattva: Guardian of Children, Travelers & Other Voyagers. Shambhala Publications. 2002. xxv-xxvi.
  7. Web site: CARES NW About Us.

External links