Buddhism, Confucianism, & Christianity.
Buddhism.
In North Korea it's - kill whitey In South Korea it's - budda
Buddhism, Confucianism, & Christianity.
There is only one language in North Korea: Korean.There is only one religion in North Korea: Juche.
People are allowed to practice Buddhism, very restricted types of other religions exist but aren't popular.
They believe in the same god and most of the religions are Christians
The two main religions in South Korea are Christianity and Buddhism.
In North Korea, activities or actions that are prohibited include criticizing the government, accessing foreign media, attempting to leave the country without permission, and practicing certain religions.
Well, South or North Korea? South Korea: According to Wikipedia, the country's two prominent religions, as of 2005, were Christianity at 29.3% of the population, with Buddhism not far behind at 22.8%. However, 46.5% of the population are quoted as having 'no religion'. North Korea: According to the government's statistics of 2000, Cheondoism is the largest religion, with 12.9% of the population. Korean Shamanism takes 12.3% of the share, with Christianity and Buddhism being the religions of just 2.1% and 1.5% of the population, respectively. Again however, Athiesm is the main 'belief' or 'disbelief' at 71.2% of the country's demographic.
North Korea has no open religious activity South Korea has a population of an bout 50 million. 58% have no professed religion, 20% of the population is Buddhist (8-10 million), 12% are various Christian denominations, 1% are Confucian. and 1% other. The numbers do not reflect people with multiple religions.
Christianity and Buddhism are in South Korea. Even though Christians have been persecuted in North Korea, they still love God and even pray for Kim Jong Un's soul to awake to God and become Christian. Juche religion is in North Korea, but it should respect other faiths like Christianity.
According to 2005 statistics compiled by the South Korean government, about 46% of citizens profess to follow no particular religion. Christians account for 29.2% of the population (of which are Protestants 18.3% and Catholics 10.9%) and Buddhists 22.8%. Confucian tradition has dominated Korean thought, along with contributions by Buddhism, Taoism, and Korean Shamanism.Buddhism