Dr. Marc Lieberman, an ophthalmologist and self-proclaimed “Jewish Buddhist” who, when he wasn’t treating glaucoma, organized a dialogue between Jewish students and the Dalai Lama, and who later introduced sight again to 1000’s of Tibetans tormented by cataracts, died on Aug. 2 at his residence in San Francisco. He was 72.
His son, Michael, stated the trigger was prostate most cancers.
Dr. Lieberman, who referred to as himself a “JuBu,” retained his Jewish religion however integrated points of Buddhist teachings and practices. He saved kosher and noticed the sabbath, however he additionally meditated a number of occasions a day. He studied the Torah, however he additionally led efforts to construct a Buddhist monastery in Northern California.
If it appeared like a contradiction to some, he was OK with that, seeing in each religions a complementary pursuit of fact and path away from worldly struggling.
“I’m a wholesome mosaic of Judaism and Buddhism,” Dr. Lieberman stated in an interview with The Los Angeles Instances in 2006. “Is that honest to both faith? Truthful schmair! It’s what I’m.”
Within the Nineteen Eighties, he turned a frontrunner within the lay Buddhist neighborhood within the Bay Space, holding weekly conferences in his lounge and internet hosting monks who visited from around the globe.
As such, he was an apparent level of contact when the Dalai Lama, the religious chief of the Tibetan folks, introduced that he was planning a go to to the US in 1989, and that he was curious to study extra about Judaism. A good friend within the workplace of Consultant Tom Lantos, a California Democrat, requested if Dr. Lieberman would facilitate a dialogue between the holy man and American Jewish leaders.
Dr. Lieberman jumped into motion, assembling what he referred to as a “dream workforce” of rabbis and Jewish students for a one-day assembly with the Dalai Lama at a Tibetan Buddhist temple in New Jersey.
It was successful, although an all-too-brief one, it being tough to pack 1000’s of years of non secular custom right into a single afternoon chat. However the Dalai Lama got here away impressed, and Dr. Lieberman determined to go greater.
The subsequent yr he accompanied eight of the unique group to Dharmsala, the city in northern India the place the Dalai Lama lives in exile. Over 4 days, Jewish and Buddhist thinkers mentioned the 2 faiths’ shared experiences with struggling, their differing ideas of God and the position that mysticism performs in every.
The ebook bought nicely and drove 1000’s of Individuals, Jews and non-Jews, to discover Buddhism — whereas on the identical time driving others to see the potential for a distinct, extra mystical Judaism.
“Marc actually deserves credit score for that dialogue, for opening Jews to their very own meditative and esoteric traditions,” Mr. Kamenetz stated in an interview.
Dr. Lieberman wasn’t finished. Throughout his conversations with the Dalai Lama and his entourage, he discovered that because of the cruel ultraviolet mild that blankets the 15,000-foot Tibetan Plateau, 15 p.c of Tibetans over 40 — and 50 p.c of these over 70 — have cataracts.
In 1995 he based the Tibet Imaginative and prescient Challenge, a grand title for what was largely a solo act: Twice a yr, generally with a colleague, he traveled to Tibet, the place he oversaw cataract surgical procedures and educated Tibetan medical doctors to carry out them. Over the following 20 years, some 5,000 folks regained their full sight because of Dr. Lieberman.
It was, he may need stated, the final word mitzvah for a folks, and a frontrunner, who had given him a lot.
“I keep in mind him saying to the Dalai Lama, ‘Whenever you come again to Tibet I would like the Tibetan folks to see you,’” Mr. Kamenetz recalled.
Marc Frank Lieberman was born on July 7, 1949, in Baltimore, the son of Alfred and Annette (Filzer) Lieberman. His father was a surgeon; his mom labored for a neighborhood non-public college and, later, for the realm chapter of Deliberate Parenthood.
Although his uncle Morris Lieberman was the rabbi at one in all Baltimore’s main Reform synagogues, Marc grew up extra within the mental and activist sides of Judaism than within the religion itself.
He studied faith at Reed School in Oregon and, after graduating, took pre-med programs on the Hebrew College of Jerusalem. Whereas in Israel he met Alicia Friedman, who turned his first spouse. He additionally turned extra non secular, preserving kosher and observing the sabbath.
He attended medical college at Johns Hopkins College and accomplished his residency in Ann Arbor, Mich. He then settled in San Francisco, the place he opened a non-public apply specializing in glaucoma therapy, which later expanded to a few places of work across the Bay Space.
Regardless of his skilled success, Dr. Lieberman — who was additionally a profitable textbook writer and a scientific professor on the College of California, San Francisco — grew disenchanted with drugs.
“It was a excessive worth for me to pay to endure the trials of coaching,” he stated in “Visioning Tibet,” a 2006 documentary about his work. “There have been so few position fashions of people that have been connecting with sufferers as different people, and the very causes that motivated me to enter drugs turned an increasing number of distant the additional I acquired within the discipline.”
At a yoga class in 1982 he met Nancy Garfield, who launched him to the Bay Space’s Buddhist neighborhood. After the 2 attended a retreat at a monastery close to Santa Cruz, Dr. Lieberman realized that he had discovered the reply to his frustrations and despair, or no less than an avenue to deal with them.
In 1986 he and Ms. Garfield married in a Buddhist ceremony. That marriage, like his first, led to divorce. Along with his son, Dr. Lieberman is survived by his brothers, Elias and Victor.
Quickly after his second marriage, Dr. Lieberman took his first journey to northern India, on the invitation of a bunch of Indian medical doctors. He discovered the expertise transformative.
“The good discovery for me in India was to see how religious the apply of medication was,” he stated within the documentary. “The medical facilities in India, those I used to be lucky sufficient to go to, are temples, and temples of affection and repair.”
He started to make common visits to India, working with native medical doctors and bringing again Buddhist books, devotional gadgets and esoterica, which crammed his home.
“On the desk,” Mr. Kamenetz wrote, a customer would discover “Shabbat candles; in the lounge, incense; on the doorway, a mezuzah; within the meditation room, a five-foot-high Buddha. If he glanced on the bookshelf, he would have seen dharma and kabbalah competing for house, and one was as prone to discover Pali as Hebrew.”
Dr. Lieberman didn’t coin the time period “JuBu,” and he was not the primary proponent of integrating points of Buddhism into the Jewish religion — the poet Allen Ginsberg was amongst those that preceded him — however he turned one of the outstanding.
He struggled to maintain his concentrate on interreligious dialogue and depart politics apart. However his many journeys to Tibet left him embittered towards the Chinese language authorities, which had annexed the area in 1959 and pushed out its non secular leaders, then sought to overwhelm Tibetan tradition with its personal.
“It’s like visiting an Indian reservation run by Normal Custer’s household,” he instructed The San Francisco Chronicle in 2006.
Beijing didn’t assume a lot of Dr. Lieberman both; he was usually harassed on the border and compelled to attend weeks in Kathmandu, Nepal, for a visa. Beginning in 2008, the Chinese language authorities steadily barred all overseas nongovernmental organizations from Tibet, bringing Dr. Lieberman’s efforts to an finish.
Not lengthy earlier than Dr. Lieberman died, Mr. Kamenetz visited him in San Francisco. Sooner or later he accompanied his good friend to a chemotherapy appointment.
“We have been actually having fun with the flowering timber in San Francisco, simply taking in every flower, every tree,” Mr. Kamenetz recalled. “Naturally we have been speaking about impermanence. And he stated probably the most stunning factor: that impermanence doesn’t simply imply that the whole lot goes away, but additionally that there’s at all times one thing new coming into focus.
“He stated, ‘No matter arises is the indispensable stunning occasion that’s arising.’”