‘Zen Catholicism’, by Dom Aelred Graham, Reviewed
<p>There is something approaching a tradition of Zen Catholicism. We could cite Thomas Merton, whose exchanges with D.T. Suzuki became <em>Zen and the Birds of Appetite</em>. Pablo d’Ors, in talks and in books like <em>Biography of Silence</em>, has cast light on the uses of Zen to ordinary Christians. And we could mention the priest Willigis Jäger, a teaching Zen master who founded a centre at Münzerschwarzach Abbey. This tradition — if we can describe it as such — sprang from the boom in Western interest in Zen in the mid-20th century, helped by the Beat Generation. And in <em>Zen Catholicism</em>, Dom Aelred Graham grapples with two questions that this explosion in interest raised. What is the attraction of Zen to Westerners? And might it be found in their own tradition — that is, Christianity?</p>
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