Japanese legal taboo

There is a great misunderstanding about color in Japan, because the Japanese are superstitious. Dharma in Japan is divided into red, yellow, black and white, and each color has a different meaning. Red: dispel evil and disease; Yellow: wealth; Black: black dharma will absorb all bad luck; White: Bless marriage or pray for passing the exam. Dharma's eyebrows are cranes and his beard is turtles, which represents the meaning of longevity for thousands of years. The part between chin and stomach is marked with auspicious words and wrinkles of red cassock with gold pigment, and "prayers" are written on both sides of cheeks. Damon's expression is firm and contains kindness and virtue. According to legend, as early as the Kamakura era, Buddhism spread from China to Japan. The most famous figure in Buddhism is the founder of Dharma. At that time, there were large and small Buddhist temples in Japan. These newly converted monks thought about it. In addition to some well-known bodhisattvas, they also added portraits of the founder of Dharma to show the different identities of the "founder". However, people find that the founder of Dharma, who has no hands and no feet, seems a little cute and stupid, and his image is very close to the people! Later, it was said that there was a great famine in Japan, so Japanese monks made Buddhism into a wish-sized hand, telling hungry people that the founder of Buddhism was a great figure. He not only insisted on understanding Buddhism for nine years, but also successfully understood it after seven disasters and eight difficulties, so everyone could tide over the difficulties as long as they wished for Buddhism. The result is very popular among the people, and this image has been passed down to this day.