By Shinge Sherry Chayat Roshi
In 1974, just 50 years ago, a small group of us began living in the Joraku-an, now known as the Beecher House. The Zen Studies Society had purchased 1,400 wooded acres surrounding Beecher Lake in the spring of 1971, and on September 13, 1972, Soen Nakagawa Roshi led the Kaisanshiki, “ceremony for opening the mountain,” where the new monastery, International Dai Bosatsu Zendo KongoJi, would be built.
As president of the board of ZSS, the young monk Eido Tai Shimano addressed the mountain, asking “forgiveness for our destruction and pollution of all rocks, trees, grasses, masses and nature” and asking “permission to establish a Zen monastery on this very site … May this place be peaceful, calm, creative and harmonious for all the years to come and for all people who may come here, generation after generation.”
Soen Roshi offered this verse:
In this bottomless lake
Let us put sun, moon and all stars;
On this boundless field
Countless bodhisattvas are being born—
Niii!
We residents of the Joraku-an (the name coming from the line “jo raku ga jo” in our Kanzeon chanting: “eternal, joyous, selfless, pure)” sat, chanted, cleaned, planted a large vegetable garden, tapped maples for syrup, and each winter morning before dawn took our old blue pickup truck out to clear and sand the road so that the construction vehicles could get to the building site. We watched in awe as the steel frame and cinder blocks rose higher and the graceful arcs of the cedar roof took form. Then, even before we would carry the Tasmanian oak floor boards up the hill, we did sesshin on the sheetrock underlayment. “The deeper our samadhi went, the higher the roof soared,” Eido Roshi wrote in Namu Dai Bosa: A Transmission of Zen Buddhism to America.
It’s hard to believe that half a century has passed, with all its depths and heights, dark shadows and bright lights. The same ardent love of practice, the same aspiration to offer it to “generation after generation,” has resulted in a beautiful renovation of the Beecher House and now, the badly needed restoration of the monastery itself.
From the earliest days, our focus has been on conserving resources and minimizing our carbon footprint. Living through the long, cold winters at 3,000 feet, we know the dire importance of a dependable heating system. Unfortunately, the original baseboard hot water system, for all its clanking and wheezing, has never been effective, whether we’ve fired up the boilers with wood, biomass pellets, or propane.
Now the technology has caught up with our needs: heat pumps have been installed in the Zendo and Dharma Hall as part of Phase I-a of our restoration (as they have been at the Beecher House and at New York Zendo), giving reliable heat in cold weather and drying up the humidity to create coolness on summer days. The first part of the solar array that will pay for the electricity used for this technology is nearly finished.
Generous gifts from our Sangha and Dharma Friends have also allowed us to start Phase I-b, which includes heat pumps and “splits” for the guest rooms on the first and second floors, as well as the library/yoga room and abbot’s apartment; and installing proper insulation throughout the building.
From my long vantage point, this is an exciting time. In just two years, we will celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the formal opening of International Dai Bosatsu Zendo KongoJi on July 4, 1976. Every inch of this building is imbued with the sincere practice and resounding vow undertaken by all of us. How appropriate, how essential it is to do everything we can to restore our spiritual home.
With that in mind, please consider adopting a project in Phase II of the Monastery Restoration:
- Finish the final phase of the solar panel installation $55,000
- Restore the masonry walls, $12,000
- Reset the bluestone patio, $61,750
- Repair fascia/rafter tails on the roof, $13,200
- Repair stairs to residents’ quarters, $1,500
- Install dehumidifiers in utility areas, $7,500
- Replace 13 handmade oak doors, $50,000
- Paint interior spaces, $35,000
Thank you for joining me in this worthy effort. Let’s do our best!