03/02/2026
Today ( March 1st ), Zen communities remember the life and passing of Dainin Katagiri Roshi (1928–1990), one of the quiet architects of Zen practice in America and a teacher whose influence continues to shape generations of practitioners today.
Katagiri Roshi was born in Osaka, Japan, in 1928 and came of age during the upheaval surrounding World War II. The instability and hardship of those years formed the background of his early life and helped shape the grounded, practical quality that later defined his teaching. Rather than approaching Buddhism as philosophy or cultural curiosity, he entered monastic training as a young man, ordaining as a Soto Zen priest and training at Eiheiji, the monastery established within the lineage of Dogen. There, Zen was learned through discipline and daily practice — long hours of sitting, work, ritual, and communal life.
His path would eventually intersect with that of Shunryu Suzuki Roshi, another Soto priest who had begun teaching in San Francisco as interest in Zen quietly emerged in postwar America. In 1963, Katagiri Roshi was sent from Japan to assist Suzuki Roshi and help support the growing community that would become the San Francisco Zen Center. During these formative years, the two worked closely together, helping translate not only language but culture — adapting an ancient practice to entirely new social conditions.
Where Suzuki Roshi helped ignite interest in Zen on the West Coast, Katagiri Roshi became one of the teachers who ensured it could endure. After Suzuki Roshi’s death in 1971, Katagiri continued teaching before moving to Minneapolis in 1972, where he founded what became the Minnesota Zen Meditation Center. Far from coastal cultural centers, he established practice in the ordinary rhythms of American life — among families, careers, harsh winters, and everyday responsibilities.
Katagiri Roshi taught that enlightenment was not separate from daily living. Practice meant learning how to cook, work, raise children, grieve, and care for others with full attention. He emphasized sincerity over attainment and encouraged students to meet confusion itself as part of the path. Those who practiced with him often described a teacher of remarkable gentleness — someone who transmitted Zen less through authority than through patience, humility, and presence.
He died in Minneapolis on March 1, 1990, leaving behind not only a thriving sangha but a model for how Zen could live naturally in American society. His teachings, preserved in books such as Returning to Silence and You Have to Say Something, continue to guide practitioners who encounter Zen not in monasteries, but in the midst of modern life.
Remembering Katagiri Roshi today is also remembering how Zen came to take root across this continent — not through spectacle or ideology, but through teachers willing to sit with people exactly where they were, trusting that awakening could unfold anywhere.
— Two Arrows Zen