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Kōbun Otogawa (乙川 弘文, Otogawa Kōbun) (February 1, 1938 – July 26, 2002) was an American Sōtō Zen priest.
Kobun Chino Otogawa, Chief Priest of Jikoji, came to America in 1967 from Eiheiji Monastery in Japan. After serving as the resident teacher at Tassajara Monastery for two years, Kobun Roshi became the Chief Priest of Haiku Zendo in Los Altos, California.
Gratefully remembering
Houn Kobun Chino Otogawa Roshi – his students and friends simply called him KOBUN – was born on February 1st. 1938 in Kamo, Japan, in his parents’ Zen temple JOKOJI. He was the youngest of six children. After the early loss of his biological father he was adopted by his later master, Hozan Koei Chino Roshi.
21 sept. 2023 · On July 26, 2002, Kobun tragically drowned in Vanja’s swimming pond in Switzerland while trying to rescue his five-year-old daughter Maya, who also drowned. It was a sudden and shocking departure from an exemplary and inspirational life.
Chino Roshi, without heirs, trained Kobun so that, in the Japanese tradition, Kobun would inherit the abbacy of Kotaiji. Chino Roshi had a deep, resonant voice and chanting, not Zazen, was his main practice. Kobun's training often took place as he followed his teacher through the fields as they walked to households in need of their ceremonies ...
Kobun Chino Otogawa. Remembering a warm-hearted roshi. By Stephan Bodian. Winter 2010. Photograph by Nicolas Schossleitner. By the time I reached graduate school in 1970, I was a born-again Zen Buddhist.