Barry Kerzin
Barry Michael Kerzin is an American physician and Buddhist monk. He has lived in Dharamshala since 1988, and serves as a personal physician to the 14th Dalai Lama, along with treating people in the local community, free of charge. Following his ordination as a monk by HH Dalai Lama in January 2003, he has travelled widely, teaching and offering workshops in which he blends Buddhist teaching and his medical training, emphasizing the spiritual and health benefits of meditation and compassion. He has served as a research participant in neuroscience research into the effects of meditation on the brain.
Kerzin is an Affiliate Professor at the University of Washington Tacoma, a Visiting Professor at the Central Institute of Tibetan Studies, India, an Honorary Professor at the University of Hong Kong, an Honorary Professor at the Mongolian National University of Medical Sciences, and a former Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Washington. He is a fellow at the Mind and Life Institute and consults for the Max Planck Institute in Leipzig on compassion training.
He is founder and president of the Altruism in Medicine Institute and founder and chairman of the Human Values Institute in Japan,
Early life and education
Kerzin was born in Hollywood, California on November 1, 1947. When he was young he read a book by D.T. Suzuki's World of Zen, which sparked an interest in Buddhism. Starting at around six, he was plagued by questions of who he was and why he was here; they led him to join a philosophy club in high school and to switch to studying philosophy in college; he had started as a pre-med student. He had wanted to become a doctor and did choose to continue on to medical school, because at the age of eleven he had a brain abscess that caused him to have seizures and fall into comas; it was eventually treated by a neurosurgeon with four brain surgeries over several years; the experience inspired him to become a doctor so that he could help other people.Kerzin received BA in Philosophy from the University of California at Berkeley and in 1976 he received an MD degree from the University of Southern California.
Career
Kerzin did his residency at Ventura County Medical Center and practiced family medicine in Ojai, California for seven years. His mother had died when he was 27, and just after he started working in Ojai, his wife was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. She died in 1983 and they had no children.He travelled in India, Sri Lanka, and Nepal for nearly a year, visiting several monasteries.
He then obtained an appointment as an Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine from late 1985 to early 1989.
In the mid-1980s, B. Alan Wallace and the Dharma Friendship Foundation coaxed a lama from Dharamsala, Gen Lamrimpa, to come to Seattle for two years, and Kerzin served as his driver. In 1988 Gen Lamrimpa returned to India and Kerzin accompanied him, intending to take a six-month leave of absence from the University of Washington. He stayed in Dharamsala when his leave ended, and began providing free medical care to the local community, HH Dalai Lama and other Tibetan lamas. He also began studying Buddhism and meditation intensively, and 19 years after he moved there, he was ordained in Feb. 2003 as a Bikkshu by HH Dalai Lama, and now cares for him as his doctor. Throughout his career, Kerzin has maintained his board certification with the American Board of Family Medicine.
Since his ordination, Kerzin has been combining his work as a monk and doctor, harmonizing the mind and body, lecturing around the world in Japan, Hong Kong, Russia, Mongolia, Taiwan, Korea, Europe, and North America. He is teaching about the interface between modern medical science and Buddhist psychology and philosophy, with particular reference to altruism in medicine and secular ethics as well as compassion, wisdom, meditation, death and dying and emotional hygiene ; he has also participated in neuroscience research on the effect of meditation on the brain.
In the mid-2000s, he served as a research subject in neuroscience research into the effects of meditation on the brain led by Richard J Davidson at the University of Wisconsin, as well as at Princeton University. Kerzin has completed many meditation retreats, including a three-year retreat.
Kerzin founded the Human Values Institute in Japan in 2010 since teaching there regularly starting in 2007; he serves as chairman of the organization. The institute publishes books and instructional movies, gives lectures, leads workshops and meditation retreats, holds an annual symposium in Tokyo, and leads pilgrimages on the island of Shikoku; the education focuses on healthy physical and emotional living and handling death compassionately. He taught about the Heart Sutra at the Gokokuji Temple in Tokyo shortly after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. For HVI, Kerzin also works in juvenile prisons in Japan, and is developing well-being curricula, taught to doctors at St. Luke's International Hospital in Tokyo, and other hospitals and medical schools in Japan, e.g. Kyoto University, and leads meditation retreats at Mt. Fuji.
In 2014, Kerzin founded the Altruism in Medicine Institute in the US. For AIMI, Kerzin gave a medical grand rounds lecture on compassion at Stanford Medical Schoo, and the Stanford CCARE], and in July lectured at Surgical Grand Rounds on the science behind meditation to the Ventura County Medical Center, as well as lectured at the University of Washington. In Spring 2016, he lectured at Oxford and Cambridge Universities, and U.K. medical schools. Kerzin was the keynote speaker for the White Coast Ceremony for new first-year medical students at the University of Louisville School of Medicine in 2016 and again in 2018. In Fall 2016 he presented the plenary lecture to 800 Family Doctors at the Family Medicine Education Consortium in Pittsburgh, and in 2018 set the foundation for a Mindfulness-Compassion-Resilience training program for 18,000 nurses at UPMC. In Pittsburgh he was interviewed by many media outlets on his involvement with UPMC, the city of Pittsburgh, and his life mission of teaching mindfulness to doctors, nurses, and other professionals and leaders. One of the articles written on him is , and during his November 2019 visit, . In 2019, Kerzin led the 2-day program Developing Altruistic Algorithms Based on Buddhist Philosophy for Artificial Intelligence, held at DeepMind in London, UK. In 2020, he published the comment Beyond Empathy to Compassion in response to the powerful and moving article by George Gubernikoff, MD, entitled .
He participated in a 2011 weeklong workshop organized by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, exploring the role that compassion training has in changing human behavior and emotions. The workshop led to a documentary film and a multimedia book to which Kerzin contributed two chapters.
He had a visiting professorship at the Central University of Tibetan Studies, Varanasi, India in 2006. At the University of Hong Kong he was appointed 'Visiting Professor of Medicine' for 2014 and 2015 and was made an Honorary Professor at the university's Centre of Buddhist Studies in March 2015. Kerzin is a fellow of the Mind & Life Institute, which was initiated in 1985 to foster a dialogue between Buddhist scholars and Western scientists.
Works
- Publications: Kerzin is the author of No Fear No Death: The Transformative Power of Compassion Nāgārjuna’s Wisdom: A Practitioner’s Guide to the Middle Way ; The Tibetan Buddhist Prescription for Happiness ; Mind and Matter: Dialogue between Two Nobel Laureates. Furthermore, Kerzin has written many chapters for books and done many interviews for radio and TV, in the US and abroad.
- TEDx Talks: He delivered a TEDx talk, on Happiness in 2010 and one in 2014 on Compassion and Anger Management
- Dharma Talks: He delivered a dharma talk on Nagarjuna’s Wisdom: The Middle Way for .
- Documentaries: Kerzin was featured in the 2006 U.S. Public Broadcasting Service documentary entitled The New Medicine. This TV documentary received a largely negative review in the Wall Street Journal, but a more positive one appeared in the New York Times.
- Kerzin was also featured in October 2015 in a PBS Newshour documentary "Dalai Lama’s American doctor wants more compassion in medicine"
- Featured in the March 2020 PBS Podcast