Initial introduction to Brazil Buddhism was first practiced in Brazil on a very limited scale by small groups of Chinese migrants in the early 19th century. At the start of the 20th century, Buddhism was introduced to Brazil on a larger scale with the mass
immigration of Japanese agricultural workers. Typically, early immigrants were not firstborn sons, who in Japan have primary responsibility for religious rituals, and
monks were forbidden from migrating by the
Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Thus, religion had a very small role in the lives of these first immigrants with the exception of funerary rites. They mainly belonged to the
Jōdo Shinshū sect of Pure Land Buddhism, which focuses on group veneration of the
Amida Buddha, that was common in agricultural regions of Japan where most immigrants came from.
Religious syncretism was normal and incorporated Buddhism,
Shintoism,
Roman Catholicism and even elements of
Afro-Brazilian religions. Initially immigrants intended to stay in Brazil for a brief period to earn money and then return to Japan. There was little impetus to create Buddhist institutions, and the lack of temples and monks meant that ceremonies were undertaken informally within the community. The first Buddhist institution in Brazil, the Taissenji temple, was founded by Reverend Tomojiro Ibaragi in
Guaiçara in 1936. This was followed by temples in
Presidente Prudente and
Mogi das Cruzes in the 1940s.
Institutionalisation Following
Japan's defeat in World War II many immigrants gave up the idea of returning to Japan and stayed in Brazil. With this came an increase in the promulgation of Shintoism and Buddhism among Japanese Brazilians. While Shinto practices had often coexisted with Buddhist ones, the end of
State Shintoism and the associated Cult of the Emperor caused the religion to lose its status among Japanese people. Buddhism, however, preserved its status particularly due to its capacity to deal with death and the afterlife for practitioners. From the late 1940s through to the 1960s a number of Buddhist institutions, missions and temples were founded from the Shin,
Honmon Butsuryū-shū,
Nichiren-shū and
Soto Zen schools. The Federation of Buddhist Sects in Brazil (Federação das Seitas Budistas no Brasil) was established as an overarching organisation in 1958. However, many Japanese Brazilians began converting to Catholicism as part their assimilation into wider Brazilian culture. The majority of those born in Japan identified as Buddhist, but a 1958 survey showed that only a minority of the subsequent Brazilian-born generations identified as such. Zen Buddhist temple in
Liberdade,
São Paulo, is the headquarters for the school's mission in South America. The 1955 founding of the Soto Zen Busshinji temple in
São Paulo was particularly important for both its service to the Japanese Brazilian community and outreach to non-Brazilians. Built with fund from the local Japanese community and the Soto Zen school, of which it was the head quarters, the temple assisted in proselytising 3,000 families. The temple was led by Master Rosen Takashina Roshi until 1985. Beginning in the 1960s, Takashina started Zen meditation workshops which in the 1970s opened up to non-Japanese attendees including public figures such as
Nise da Silveira and
Orides Fontela. The first Zen monastery was established in 1976 in
Espírito Santo by Ryotan Tokuda, a monk from the Busshinji Temple, along with new non-Japanese practitioners. In 1984, a second Zen monastery was founded in
Minas Gerais and the Zen Society of Brazil (Sociedade Soto Zen do Brasil). A number of other Zen institutions were established by Tokuda in the 1980s and 1990s and by 2000 there were 23 centres and temples and three monasteries for Zen Buddhists.
Spread to wider Brazilian society Beginning in the later 1940s, Brazil has received steady waves of Chinese and Korean immigrants. These migrants have brought with them the Buddhist practices from their natives countries. In 1962, the first
Chinese Buddhist temple, called
Mo Ti, was established in
São Paulo. Two decades later, a second Chinese temple opened and was followed by a number of
Taiwanese Buddhist temples. The only
Korean Buddhist temple in Brazil,
Jin Nak, is from the
Jogye school and opened in São Paulo in 1988. Murillo Nunes de Azevedo was one of the first prominent non-Asian Brazilians to study Buddhism. Azevedo was an engineer who had published and taught on Asian philosophy at the
Pontifical Catholic University in
Rio de Janeiro among other institutions In 1955 he founded the Buddhist Society of Brazil (Sociedade Budista do Brasil) which arranged film screenings and lectures with materials provided by the Sri Lankan and Indian embassies. He translated a copy of
D. T. Suzuki's Introduction to Zen Buddhism to Portuguese in 1961. Azevedo later became a Shin Buddhist leader and held a prominent position at the Honpa Hongwanji temple in
Brasília. Similar to other western countries in the 1960s and 1970s, early non-Asian Brazilian Buddhist practitioners were attracted to Buddhism through the
counterculture's interest in
eastern spirituality. These people mainly practiced to Japanese Zen Buddhism. For non-Japanese Brazilians, their interest in Zen Buddhism lay in meditation and Buddhist teachings rather than the rites and ancestor worship Japanese Brazilians valued. Generally separate institutions catered to Brazilians of Japanese and non-Japanese descent. Where spaces were shared between these two groups, conflicts could arise. In the case of the Busshinji Temple, several temples leaders faced criticism from practitioners of Japanese descent for their more universal approach to Zen and catering to Brazilians of non-Japanese descent. These disputes at Busshinji Temple have led to breakaway organisations forming with a more modern approach and separate practices within the temple for the Japanese and non-Japanese communities. In 1998, Busshinji Temple began a more thorough integration of Zen Buddhism into Brazilian culture including translating sutras into Portuguese and giving lectures in Portuguese though traditional rituals are still performed for the Japanese community. Similarly to Zen Buddhism, the
Soka Gakkai school, which started in Brazil with a small Japanese group, has grown by reaching out to non-Asian Brazilians to become the numerically largest branch of Brazilian Buddhism.
Tibetan Buddhism is the most recently introduced form of Buddhism which began to be practiced in the late 1980s. The first Tibetan Buddhist institution in Brazil was opened in 1988 by a master from the
Nyingma school. This was closely followed by other centres and temples from the Nyingma,
Guelug and
Kagyu schools. By 2000, there were 27 Tibetan Buddhist centres in Brazil. In the 1990s, Buddhism became better known to the wider Brazilian population with stories on Buddhism appearing in many popular magazines. The 1991 Brazilian census estimated showed 340,000 Brazilians practiced Buddhism; however, this does not take into account Brazilians who practice more than one religion nor that Buddhism is often perceived as a philosophy rather than a religion. An Elle magazine articles from 1998 estimated that there were half a million Buddhists in Brazil from a variety of schools. According to the Brazilian census data, the number of Asian Brazilian Buddhists has fallen from 150,571 in 1950 to 76,896 in 2010. There are several reasons for this decline. Younger Japanese Brazilians have a diminished understanding of Buddhism which is often only associated with grandparents. There are very few new Japanese immigrants to reinvigorate Buddhism in the community. Temples struggle or are unwilling to reach out to young Japanese Brazilians and many do not hold regular services. Japanese Buddhist communities also often prefer to communicate in Japanese which may not be spoken by younger Japanese Brazilians. This is possibly a result of the initial Japanese Buddhist immigrants who saw Brazil as a temporary home and therefore did not utilise Portuguese in their practices. ==Mahayana Buddhism==