Buddhism is one of the world's religions that you can find in the world. It flourished in the east world, entered into the western world, joining all other great religions. Like all other major religions, Buddhism shows that gender equality has obvious problems. That is because we are considering both the obligation of the monastery and the obligation of religious obligation. Through the next story about the early Buddhist women, the evidence from the text shows where they are in the community and who they are.
Throughout its history, Buddhism refuses any distinction between men and women in terms of whether to obtain enlightenment or how to do it. The core of Buddhism is to insist that all people gain enlightenment regardless of gender or social status. Buddhism often claims women's essential equality in their teachings, but in the early history of that history, the orders of women's monastic systems were systematically dependent on male orders. According to tradition, the relationship between the orders of nuns and orders of monks was established by the Buddha himself. Initially, he refused to accept the order established by women, but later made another decision for women. But their establishment depended on nuns accepting the eight rules that put their orders under the control of the monks and asked them to obey the first level monks to the highest grade nuns I will.
In Buddism, like many other religions, there is a Buddhist nun. There are nuns in all Buddhist traditions, but the status of various Buddhist countries is different. A fully ordained Buddhist nun is also known as bhikshuni and has more patimokkha rules than monks and bhikkhu. All important oaths are the same. Buddhist monks and nuns differ greatly in their clothing and social customs between Buddhist culture. Chinese nuns maintain full bhikshuni, but Tibetan nuns do not maintain. In Hinaana Buddhism countries women do not want to wear Saffron robes. Thailand is a country that has never had a fully appointed Bhikkhuni. There is another order called a mage, or a nun with no fate. When the 21st century came, Thai Buddhist women began to introduce bhikshuni Sangha to their country despite the lack of public perception. In Taiwan, Buddhism expresses the perfect bhikkhun tradition