The best way to "prove" your Buddhist sincerities - I'd say - is to teach someone else what you know about what you do know.
There is no magical meditation they can use to levitate in the air, nor do they need to shave their head and wear a robe. They don't need to expound 2,500 years of Dharma in a continuous stream of information nor recite mantras in perfect Pali with the appropriate mudras.
If I say I know how to play the guitar I will prove it by playing it. If I say I am Buddhist I will prove it by being Buddhist and teaching what I have learned.
Buddism
International Theravada Buddhist Missionary University was created in 1998.
Theravada Buddhist
China
Theravada Buddhism
There are 3 main Buddhist denominations: Mahayana, Theravada, & Vajrayana.
NO. Cambodia is officially a Theravada Buddhist country with a religious ministry in the government that subsidizes the care of Buddhist temples and seminaries for Buddhist monks. The country in 95% Theravada Buddhist. Only 1.6% of Cambodia is Muslim and the majority of these are the ethnic Cham people, who migrated from south-central Vietnam centuries ago (as opposed to the more-indigenous Khmer majority).
The last edit was super wrong. The answer is Theravada and Mahayana. Those were the two Buddhist groups that spread Buddah's ideas to Southeast Asia. Then, Buddah's idea was adopted in Ceylon and Sri Lanka. They are described as cities, not as the name of the groups that spread Siddharta's idea. That answer from the last person? He or she needs help.
It was seen as the only alternative to Islam.
According to the Laos 2005 census, 67% are Theravada Buddhist, 1.5% are Christian, and 31.5% are other or unspecified.
Many early Buddhist texts were written in Pali, a language of India.It is the sacred language of Theravada Buddhism.
Sri lanka is a Buddhist country. monque Mihindu brought Buddhism to sri lanka.
The Dalai Lama is a Buddhist leader of religious officials of the Gelug or "Yellow Hat" branch of Tibetan Buddhism.This is a Mahahyanic Buddhist sect with additional aspects of native Tibtan religions.