Story URL:
http://news.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/news.aspx?id=36031
Story Retrieval Date: 11/23/2009 11:16:58 PM CST
'Unitarian Buddhist' finds dream of retreat center, one can at a time
by
JEREMY GANTZ
May 09, 2007
After retiring as the executive director of a Northwest Side boys and girls club nine years ago, Richard Brandon began collecting cans.Each time he discovered another nickel in the form of discarded aluminum, the self-described “Unitarian Buddhist” repeated hiscustom-made mantra: “Can happen.”Six years later, with the help of friends – freelance can collectors – Brandon was finally able to buy what he had spent 10 yearsdreaming about: a nonsectarian Buddhist retreat center two hours from Chicago.The center, called Bright Dawn Home Spread and located on a converted farm in Plymouth, Wis., is the culmination of Brandon’s50-year spiritual odyssey.Now a lay Buddhist minister whose Dharma name is Zenyo, or “meditating sun,” the 71-year-old’s life has changed dramatically sincehe was a boy attending Latin and Polish-language Masses with his mother.Or perhaps not. Perhaps Brandon has remained the same, always seeking the proper path to improve the world around him. As hesays, “Everything is wonder. And everything is becoming.”
A book sparks a journey
Brandon discovered Buddhism through an interest in meditation. He was raised Catholic but never took to it, dissatisfied with thecatechism classes his family pushed him into in high school.“I recall asking questions and not being satisfied with the answers,” Brandon said.And although he was baptized in his wife’s evangelical church in Logan Square just before their marriage in 1955 – her family required it – a book recommendation quickly pulled him away from his wife’s church.Brandon’s brother-in-law gave him “The Quest of the Overself” by a British mystic and philosopher Paul Brunton, and he beganimmersing himself in meditation.“The Eastern way was not based on words, it was based on spiritual meditative practice, sort of a mysticism,” Brandon said earlier thismonth. “For some reason that really appealed to me.”But rather than make a break with Christianity entirely, Brandon began visiting Unitarian congregations as he delved more intomeditation while studying at George Williams College, then in Hyde Park.“Unitarians respected the path that each person was on, whatever that path was,” Brandon said. “And they were always on the forefrontof social action – women’s rights, prison reform. All kinds of social action issues.”Today, 50 years later, he is president of the American Buddhist Association, an independent spiritual organization dedicated topromoting Buddhist teachings and practices in a nonsectarian way.It was created in Chicago in 1955 by the Rev. Gyomay Kubose, founder of the Buddhist Temple of Chicago, who sought to makeBuddhism available to all people regardless of linguistic and ethnic background.Today Brandon describes himself as a Unitarian Buddhist and continues Kubose’s mission to develop a distinctly American brand of Buddhism outside of the established Asian traditions.“The two things – Unitarianism and Buddhism – seemed to address my spiritual path. And also my social activism, as far as theUnitarians. So those two things came together.”
‘It’s been a transformation’
Although he has meditated for more than half his life, Brandon is no monk.To the contrary: Buddhism has helped the naturally shy resident of Chicago's Ravenswood Manor neighborhood, who moves his 6-foot-2-inch frame slowly and methodically, become more engaged with the world, his wife says.“Richard was always on the quiet side. Buddhism has really opened him up,” said Maryann, 69, who married her husband while shewas still in high school. “There was a time when he couldn’t make a speech. It’s been a transformation.”But Brandon’s Buddhism hasn’t left his wife untouched. Maryann, who also considers herself a Unitarian Buddhist, is head cook atBright Dawn Home Spread and treasurer of Heartland Sangha. The organization is affiliated with the American Buddhist Association
'Unitarian Buddhist' finds dream of retreat center, one can at a timehttp://news.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/news.aspx?id=36031&print=11 of 411/24/2009 12:17 AM
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