Currently, there are twenty-three Zen Buddhist centers and temples, three Zen Buddhist monasteries, thirty-four Tibetan centers, seven Theravaada centers, thirty-seven Nishi Hongwanji (Joodo Shinshuu) temples and twenty-two associations (where there is no resident monk), twenty-six Higashi hongwanji (joodo Shinshuu) temples and associations, two Joodoshu temples, four Nichireshuu temples (with 5,000 families of adherents), twelve Honmon Butsuryu Shu (a branch of Nichiren) temples, and four Shingon temples (with 850 families of adherents) in Brazil. Tibetan Buddhism, which was the latest to arrive (1988), is undergoing a boom similar to that which is taking place in the West
Buddhism is Japan’s second largest religion, right behind Shinto. It includes multiple traditions a...
In this essay, I analyze the religious practices of Japanese Brazilians who adhere to Sōtō Zen, the ...
Shingon Buddhism originated in ancient Indian Tantric thought and developed as a distinctive form of...
The phenomenon of Buddhism is still very recent in Brazil. It has evolved much faster in the last de...
In this chapter, I will shed light on how the two distinct congregations have laid claim to Busshinj...
Widely perceived as an overwhelmingly Catholic nation, Brazil has experienced in recent years a grow...
This chapter analyses the history of the arrival of the Sôtôshû School of Zen Buddhism in Brazil. It...
Widely perceived as an overwhelmingly Catholic nation, Brazil has experienced in recent years a grow...
In this paper, I discuss the establishment of Sõtõ Zenshð missions in Brazil. I contend that the ...
This paper explores the historical role of Busshinji temple as a center of Buddhism in Brazil for no...
In considering the Japanese Diaspora in Brazil, I will examine how European ideas of Orientalism med...
In the twentieth century one sees an immense expansion of religions, or as Pierre Bourdieu puts it, ...
Currently there are approximately sixty branches of "Japanese religions" in ·Brazil. This comprehens...
Sôtô Zenshû was the first Japanese Buddhist school in Brazil that attracted members from outside the...
In the first part the article offers a preliminary synoptic approach to Buddhism in South America in...
Buddhism is Japan’s second largest religion, right behind Shinto. It includes multiple traditions a...
In this essay, I analyze the religious practices of Japanese Brazilians who adhere to Sōtō Zen, the ...
Shingon Buddhism originated in ancient Indian Tantric thought and developed as a distinctive form of...
The phenomenon of Buddhism is still very recent in Brazil. It has evolved much faster in the last de...
In this chapter, I will shed light on how the two distinct congregations have laid claim to Busshinj...
Widely perceived as an overwhelmingly Catholic nation, Brazil has experienced in recent years a grow...
This chapter analyses the history of the arrival of the Sôtôshû School of Zen Buddhism in Brazil. It...
Widely perceived as an overwhelmingly Catholic nation, Brazil has experienced in recent years a grow...
In this paper, I discuss the establishment of Sõtõ Zenshð missions in Brazil. I contend that the ...
This paper explores the historical role of Busshinji temple as a center of Buddhism in Brazil for no...
In considering the Japanese Diaspora in Brazil, I will examine how European ideas of Orientalism med...
In the twentieth century one sees an immense expansion of religions, or as Pierre Bourdieu puts it, ...
Currently there are approximately sixty branches of "Japanese religions" in ·Brazil. This comprehens...
Sôtô Zenshû was the first Japanese Buddhist school in Brazil that attracted members from outside the...
In the first part the article offers a preliminary synoptic approach to Buddhism in South America in...
Buddhism is Japan’s second largest religion, right behind Shinto. It includes multiple traditions a...
In this essay, I analyze the religious practices of Japanese Brazilians who adhere to Sōtō Zen, the ...
Shingon Buddhism originated in ancient Indian Tantric thought and developed as a distinctive form of...