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Taizan Maezumi

Taizan Maezumi

1931 CE1995 CE · Modern · Los Angeles, CA

February 24, 1931 – May 15, 1995

Taizan Maezumi (1931–1995) was a Japanese Zen teacher who held lineage in the Sōtō, Rinzai, and Sanbō Kyōdan traditions and became a major force in American Zen. He established the Zen Center of Los Angeles in 1967 and founded the White Plum lineage, training a large number of Western successors—including Bernie Glassman and Charlotte Joko Beck—who went on to lead their own communities. His teaching combined Sōtō 'just sitting' with Rinzai kōan work. His later years at the Zen Center of Los Angeles were also marked by acknowledged struggles with alcohol and by controversy over relationships with students. He died in 1995.

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Los Angeles, CACalifornia, USA

What they did here

DOCUMENTED: established the Zen Center of Los Angeles in 1967 and trained many American successors.

About Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles, California, USA, was an early West Coast centre of American Zen. The pioneer Japanese teacher Nyogen Senzaki opened a meditation 'zendo' there from the 1920s, and the Sōtō priest Taizan Maezumi founded the Zen Center of Los Angeles in 1967, training a generation of Western teachers.

In Los Angeles, CA at the same time

Nyogen Senzaki, Charlotte Joko Beck, Bernie Glassman

Across the traditions, in Los Angeles, CA at the same time

See other sages who lived in Los Angeles, CA

In the same place & time

Sages whose lives overlapped with Taizan Maezumi’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.

The world in their lifetime

Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Taizan Maezumi’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.