dalmado is a picture of dalma...there is a legend where he projected out of his body..."astral projection"??.....and when he came back, his body was gone....so he picked a body of some ugly dude...a homeless beggar, i think....dats y when u see dalmado, da face is ugly.....well.....and they say that dalmado drawn by some monk in Korea brings good luck when hung on ur house or sumtin.....well...dats my 2 cents on dalmado
i have no clue
Korean Buddhism is somewhat concerned with theological doctrines, as are many schools of Mahayana Buddhism. There are several forms of Buddhism practiced in South Korea, but the most common is the Chogye, the Korean Rinzai Zen school of Mahayana Buddhism. There is little truly distinct about Korean Buddhism. There is one element, however. In Mahayana Buddhism, there is the view that the Buddha left a successor, Mahakashyapa, as the second Buddhist patriarch. Zen Buddhism believes that the founder of Ch'an/Zen, Bodhidharma, was the tenth Buddhist patriarch. Most of Zen Buddhism believes that there were only 28 Buddhist patriarchs. The 28th gave his transmission to many successors, thus ending the lineage of Buddhist patriarchs. But there are two schools of Korean Rinzai Zen, Chogye and one other, which both believe that the head of their sect is the current patriarch of all Buddhism. Thus these two schools of Korean Rinzai Zen are sometimes referred to as "Patriarchal Zen".
Traditionally, Son Buddhism in Korea is essentially the same as Ch'an Buddhism in China or Zen Buddhism in Japan. Today, Korean Buddhists are not limited only to practicing Son Buddhism. .
Chae-ryong Sim has written: 'Korean Buddhism' -- subject(s): Buddhism
Buddhism arrived in Japan when the Korean king in the winter of 552 sent a mission to Japan.
Won Buddhism (Tongbulgyo), and Mugyo (Korean Shamanism) with a background of Korean Confucianism.
Traditional Buddhism, Korean Confucianism,Korean shamanism, or Christianity.
Some Buddhism statues arrived by way of Korean peninsula, but as for Buddhism, Japan and China had direct contact with each other, and there was no need for Korea in this regard.
Traditional Buddhism, Korean Confucianism,Korean shamanism, or Christianity.
The two main religions in South Korea are Christianity and Buddhism.
Buddhism and Hinduism
Buddhism