Difference between revisions of "JuBu"

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* [[Bhikkhu Bodhi]], Ph.D.
 
* [[Bhikkhu Bodhi]], Ph.D.
* Sylvia Boorstein
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* [[Sylvia Boorstein]]
* Joseph Goldstein
+
* [[Joseph Goldstein]]
 
* [[Ayya Khema]]
 
* [[Ayya Khema]]
* Jack Kornfield, Ph.D.
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* [[Jack Kornfield, Ph.D.
* Larry Rosenberg, Ph.D.
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* [[Larry Rosenberg]], Ph.D.
* Sharon Salzberg
+
* [[Sharon Salzberg]]
 
* [[David Snyder]], Ph.D.
 
* [[David Snyder]], Ph.D.
* Diana Winston
+
* [[Diana Winston]]
  
 
==JuBu Vajrayana - Tibetan Buddhist teachers and authors==
 
==JuBu Vajrayana - Tibetan Buddhist teachers and authors==

Revision as of 03:45, 30 September 2008

A Jewish Buddhist (also Jubu or Buju) is a person with a Jewish ethnic or religious background who practices forms of Buddhist meditation and spirituality. The term Jubu was first brought into wide circulation with the publication of The Jew in the Lotus by Rodger Kamenetz. In some cases, the term can refer to individuals who practice both traditions, in other cases "Jewish" is no more than an ethnic designation, where the person's main religious practice is Buddhism. In yet other cases, a Jubu is simply a Jew with an interest in Buddhism. A large demographic of Jewish Buddhists, constituting its majority, still maintain religious practices and beliefs in Judaism coupled with Buddhist practices and perhaps beliefs.

Goldie Hawn has stated that "Buddhism is my religion and Judaism is my tribe."

Celebrity JuBu

  • Leonard Cohen (singer-song writer)
  • Allen Ginsberg (poet, activist)
  • Goldie Hawn (actress)
  • Kate Hudson (actress)
  • Robert Downey, Jr. (actor)
  • Adam Yauch (Beastie Boys)

JuBu Theravada Buddhist teachers and authors

JuBu Vajrayana - Tibetan Buddhist teachers and authors

  • Lama Surya Das
  • Rodger Kamenetz

JuBu Zen Buddhist teachers

  • Tetsugen Bernard Glassman
  • Zoketsu Norman Fischer