How Buddhism Flourished throughout the World

Buddhism never developed a missionary movement; Buddha’s teachings nevertheless extend far and wide on the Indian Subcontinent and from there throughout Asia. In each new culture it attained, the Buddhist methods and styles were modified to fit the local mentality, without compromising the essential points of wisdom and compassion.

Buddhism, however, never extended an overall hierarchy of religious authority with a supreme head. Each country to which it spread expanded its own forms, its own religious structure and its own spiritual head. The most well-known and worldwide respected of these authorities at present is His Holiness the Dalai Lama of Tibet.

There are two main separations of Buddhism. The Hinayana, or Modest Vehicle, emphasizes personal liberation, while the Mahayana, or Vast Vehicle, stresses working to become a completely enlightened Buddha in order to be best able to help others. Each has various sub-divisions in Buddhism. At present, however, three major types survive: one Hinayana, known as Theravada, in South East Asia, and two Mahayana, namely the Chinese and Tibetan traditions.

The Theravada tradition spread from India to SriLanka and Burma in the third century B.C.E., and starting there to Yunnan in southwest China, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, South Vietnam and Indonesia. Pockets of Indian merchants practicing Buddhism were soon found on the coast of the Arabian Peninsula and still as far as Alexandria, Egypt. Other forms of Hinayana spread from that time to modern-day Pakistan, Afghanistan, eastern and coastal Iran, Uzbekistan, Kashmir, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan.

These were the ancient states of Gandhara, Parthia, Bactria and Sogdia. From this base in Central Asia, they spread more in the second century C.E. to East Turkistan (Xinjiang) and Inner China, and in the late seventh century to Kyrghyzstan and Kazakhstan. These forms of Hinayana were later combined with Mahayana aspects that also came from India so that Mahayana ultimately became the dominant form of Buddhism in most of Central Asia.

The Chinese form of Mahayana later spread to Japan, Korea and North Vietnam. Another early wave of Mahayana, mixed with Shaivite forms of Hinduism, spread from India to Nepal, Indonesia, Malaysia and elements of South East Asia starting in about the fifth century.

The Tibetan Mahayana tradition, which, starting in the seventh century, inherited the full historical development of Indian Buddhism, widen throughout the Himalayan regions and to Mongolia, East Turkistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrghyzstan, northern Inner China, Manchuria, Siberia and the Kalmyk Mongol region near the Caspian Sea in European Russia.

Importance of the Buddhist Flag


The Buddhist flag, primarily hoisted in 1885 in Sri Lanka, is a symbol of confidence and calm used throughout the world to represent the Buddhist faith. The six colours of the flag symbolize the colors of the aura that originated from the body of the Buddha when He achieved Enlightenment under the Bodhi Tree. The horizontal band of colors represent the races of the world living in accord and the vertical band of color represent everlasting world peace. The colours represent the perfection of Buddhahood and the Dharma.

  • The Blue light that emitted from the Buddha's hair represents the strength of Universal Concern for all beings.
  • The Yellow light that give out from the Buddha's epidermis represents the Middle Way which keep away from all extremes and brings balance and liberation.
  • The Red light that gives out from the Buddha's flesh represents the blessings that the practice of the Buddha's Teaching brings.
  • The White light that emitted from the Buddha's bones and teeth indicates the purity of the Buddha's Teaching and the freedom it brings.
  • The Orange light that glow with from the Buddha's palms, heels and lips represents the constant Wisdom of the Buddha's Teaching.
  • The Combination of Colour represents the universality of the Truth of the Buddha's Teaching.
Therefore, the overall flag represents that regardless of race, nationality, division or colour, all sentient beings acquire the latent of Buddhahood.

The six colors are better understandable as :

1. Blue: suggesting the thought of loving kindness and peace in Buddhism

2. Yellow: it signifies the Middle Path, that is, an entire absence of form and emptiness

3. Red: signifying success, knowledge, asset, destiny and self-respect.

4. White: signifying purity, liberation that the Dharma will always survive regardless of time or space.
5. *Orange: The spirit of Buddhism which is full of knowledge, strength and pride.

6. The grouping of these five colors represents that it is the one and only Truth.

The horizontal bars indicate peace and concord among all races through out the world whereas the vertical bars symbolize everlasting peace within the world. In straightforward terms, the Buddhist Flag involves that there is no inequity of competition, nationality, areas or skin color; that every living being own the Buddha Nature and all have the possible to become a Buddha.

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The ideal guide for undergraduate students subsequent courses on Buddhism, Theology, Religious Studies, and a range of Social Science disciplines such as Anthropology; postgraduate students, practising Buddhists, academics, and the general reader or researcher looking for information on Buddhism.