Buddhism in Italy is the third most spread religion, next toChristianity andIslam. In the country there are 358,000Buddhists, that is to say the 0.6% of the total population.[1][2]
According to some sources, Buddhism might have been practised in Italy, although marginally, already inAncient Rome,[3] likely disappeared with thepersecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire.
The contemporary Buddhist presence in Italy instead begins to be known in the 1960s, with the first attempts to ground some Buddhist centers. Between the oldest we can count the one of Engaku Taino and the Fudenji of Taiten Guareschi, disciple of Taisen Deshimaru. In 1960 is founded the Buddhist Italian Association (Associazione Buddhista Italiana) and in 1967 begins the publishing of the review Buddhismo Scientifico.
From the years 1984-1989, theFoundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition ofThubten Yeshe andThubten Zopa Rinpoche was based at theIstituto Lama Tzong Khapa in the Tuscan village ofPomaia.
TheItalian Buddhist Union, member of theEuropean Buddhist Union,[4] was founded in Milan in 1985,[5] received recognition by the President of the Italian Republic in 1991 and signed an agreement with theItalian government in 2007, in accordance with article 8 of theItalian Constitution (which regulates the relations with religious minorities), and the agreement became law in 2012.[6][7]
The UBI is acknowledged as an association with juridical figure and coordinates the 44 principal centers in Italy in the tradition Theravada, Mahayana, Vajrayana which hold the practice and the sharing of the traditional teaching.

Between the most important Buddhist centers of Italy there is the Soto Zen center "L'Arco", in Rome, the already cited Scaramuccia ofLuigi Mario Engaku Taino, in Scaramuccia, Orvieto; even in Rome, the lay Buddhist association laica A.Me.Co for the practice ofTheravada Buddhism, founded and directed by the lay Dhamma teacher Corrado Pensa, and there is alsoSantacittarama, Theravādin monastery of theForest's Sangha located near Rome; In Milan, the biggestZen center is the Zen Buddhist monasteryEnsoji il Cerchio, founded and guided by the Zen masterCarlo Zendo Tetsugen Serra; in Pomaia, the Tibetan Buddhism finds one of the biggest center in Europe, the Lama Tzong Khapa Institute. TheVajrayana Buddhism is represented, among others, by the centers of theDiamond Way Buddhism of theKagyu school, spread in almost all the Italian regions.
Even the Japanese Buddhist denominations affiliated toNichiren Buddhism are represented in the UBI: the temple ofNichiren Shu Renkoji, in Cereseto, near Novara, guided by the master Shoryo Tarabini, and the association Nipponzan Myohonji, which provided to the grounding of the biggest stupa in Italy, the Peace Pagoda in Comiso (Sicily). In 2014 alsoHonmon Butsuryū-shū, or HBS, with its Kofuji temple in Florence, has become part of UBI.[8]
In June 2015, the SGI-Italy (Soka Gakkai Italian Buddhist Institute) was recognized by the Italian government with a special accord underItalian Constitution Article 8, acknowledging it as anofficial religion of Italy and eligible to receive direct taxpayer funding for its religious and social activities. It also recognizes the Soka Gakkai as a "Concordat" (It: "Intesa") that grants the religions status in "a special 'club' of denominations consulted by the government in certain occasions, allowed to appoint chaplains in the army - a concordat is not needed for appointing chaplains in hospitals and jails - and, perhaps more importantly, to be partially financed by taxpayers' money." Eleven other religious denominations share this status.[9][10]
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