With reference to Shunryu Suzuki Roshi's classic Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind, Rami Shapiro begins with beginner's mind as empty, free of the habits of the expert, ready to accept, to doubt, and open to all the possibilities. It is the kind of mind which can see things as they are, which step by step and in a flash can realize the original nature of everything. Then, Rami ponders beginner's mind in the child of the Passover Haggadah who knows not how to ask. The parents of this child are told to open (patach) the child to the art of questioning. Asking questions is key to Jewish mind.
The questioning perennial beginner is central to both Zen and Jewish, Rami demonstrates: a daring, iconoclastic, often humorous mind devoted to shattering the words, texts, isms, and ideologies on which expert mindclosed to inquirydepends.
Zen Mind / Jewish Mind is not a scholarly study of anything, let alone Zen or Judaism, and despite all the footnotes, the book rests solely on Shapiro's fifty-plus years of playing in the garden of Judaism, Zen, and advaita/nonduality. Chapters include Dharma Eye, God's I (1), Koan and Midrash (4), and The Yoga of Conversation (7).
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