Staten Islanders Can Join Buddhists From Mahasangha NYC On Day-Long Walk For Peace Pilgrimage Through NYC’s Five Boroughs: Day Of Remembering Our Interdependence

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Buddhists Lead Day-Long Peace Pilgrimage in NYC’s Five Boroughs

Editor’s note: We will be adding additional details and photos once they’ve been received from the organizers.  We previously covered the 9/11 Table of Silence project, which is a Buddhist ceremony featuring monks participating in the prayer ritual and ceremony.  We also covered the Tibetan Museum’s singing bowl meditation event.  Several years ago, Rep. Malliotakis traveled to India to meet the Dalai lama, whose incredible film The Wisdom Of Happiness we reviewed.  We also published a discussion on what a bodhisattva is.  This is a core concept in Buddhism, that one can choose to continue to reincarnate on earth in order to assist humanity in becoming free and in a constant state of bliss and happiness.  Dharma Publishing is working to preserve the ancient writings and teachings of Tibetan Buddhists.  

 

Below are questions and answers which were provided by the event’s organizers and participating organizations: 

Do you have a list of the organizations that are participating, and is the head organizer on Staten Island? Would you like to provide a statement for our readers on the importance and meaning of this event?
Here’s a longish statement (coming from the heart!) specific to Staten Island:
I’ll be leading the practice (acknowledgements/meditation/walking etc.) in Staten Island. I don’t live there. I do have family and friends who do or used to live there. Personally, I volunteered to lead and hold the practice in Staten Island because I wanted to re-connect with the land, because it’s the one borough I know the least about, even when I’ve visited there many times for gatherings with friends and family, because I want to connect with the history (Ramapo, Sandy Ground Historical Society, Alice Austen, etc.) and the stories, both of joy (Snug Harbor fiestas!) and of deep suffering (Eric Garner); stories both of people who’ve lived there for generations and of immigrants, and the rich tradition in the arts and culture (Sea View Playwright’s Theatre, Wu-Tang Clan!). It is especially important for me and for my fellow organizers to touch the “land” of Staten Island because the borough is often referred to as the “forgotten borough,” and we say that that may be true, but we’re sure it is never forgotten by those who live or lived there or have a connection to it. Staten Island is often not in the consciousness of the rest of the city. We want to sincerely help repair this, to celebrate the borough and its peoples, to do what is helpful. At the same time, perhaps the label of “forgotten borough” is a badge of pride for Staten Islanders, with a defiant, self-determination spirit. We want to also honor that! We’ve invited organizations and communities in Staten Island to the peace pilgrimage. Whether or not they’re able to come, we hope that our presence in Staten Island—in meditation and reflection—is welcome, and that it will be supportive of their work and of benefit to all beings in the borough. Day of Remembering Our Interdependence is precisely about our inherent interconnectedness. In the midst of conflicts and divisions—locally, nationally, worldwide—we want to insist on our mutual belonging and loving-kindness for all beings.
Here’s a list of partners/collaborators:
– Grandmother Clara Soaring Hawk (Ramapo Munsee Lenape)
– Owl Steven Dennison Smith (Ramapo Munsee Lenape)
– The Thích Nhất Hạnh Program for Engaged Buddhism, Union Theological Seminary (visit their Substack: https://uniondharma.substack.com)
– Buddhist Coalition for Democracy
– Rev. Doyeon Park, Won Buddhism of Manhattan
– Mindful Rebels (Extinction Rebellion)
– Wanda Salaman, Lisa Ortega, Mothers On the Move / Madres en Movimiento (MOM)
– Bhante SanathavihariSarathchandra Buddhist Center
– Sheryl Durant, Kelly Street Community Garden
– Buddhist Council of New York
– Buddhist Action Coalition
– Brooklyn Zen Center
– DSA Buddhist Circle
– Fire Lotus Temple
– Kaira Jewel Lingo
– Adam Bucko
– Tenzin Mingyur Paldron
– Mid City Zen
– Rev. James A. Lynch
– New York Insight
– Sylvain Leroux
– Dharma Gates
– Rev. Juan Carlos Ruiz
– Nara Garber (Resistance Revival Chorus, Singing Resistance)
– Gary Baker (New York Sings Along)
– Leah Penniman, Soul Fire Farm
– Sister True VowBlue Cliff Monastery

Are people of all faiths welcome, and are there members of other faiths involved in the organizing?
Yes, all are welcome, people of all faiths or of no religious affiliation. We have Catholic, Lutheran, Episcopal as partners. Also indigenous folks: Ramapo Munsee Lenape and Yucatac Mayan. The organizing team are Buddhist practitioners, also from different traditions. At the helm of this organizing team are Women of Color.

Inspired by the Theravada Buddhist Monks’ 2,300-mile Walk for Peace, and embodying Thich Nhat Hanh’s edict: The next Buddha may take the form of a community

 

Join Staten Island Buddhist monks, people of the Buddhist, Unitarian, indigenous, and many other faiths for a walk to remember the interdependence of all living things, including all human beings:

Day of Remembering Our Interdependence

Sunday, 12 July 2026, 8AM-8PM

New York City’s five boroughs: Start on Staten Island or in the Bronx

8-9AM – Two simultaneous starting points. Participants join either one:

– Staten Island, The Staten Island September 11th Memorial / Postcards, a permanent sculpture designed by Masayuki Sono (North Shore Waterfront Esplanade Park).

– The Bronx, Banana Kelly Double Dutch (Intervale Ave. and Kelly St.), an homage to the people of the Bronx by sculptors John Ahearn and Rigoberto Torres.

11AM-12PM – Manhattan, African Burial Ground National Monument (Duane and Elk Sts.). With blessings from Ramapo Munsee Lenape elder Grandmother Clara Soaring Hawk, along with Owl Steven Dennison Smith.

 

2-3PM – Brooklyn, Metropolitan Detention Center (80 29th St.), where people arrested/abducted by ICE are being held. With practice led by Kaira Jewel LingoAdam BuckoRev. Juan Carlos Ruiz, and Tenzin Mingyur Paldron.

 


5-7PM – Queens, Socrates Sculpture Park (32-01 Vernon Blvd.). Culminating gathering with songs, poetry, and food. With music by Sylvain Leroux and practice offerings from Rev. Doyeon Park and Rev. James A. Lynch.

On Sunday, 12 July 2026, Buddhist practitioners will lead a day-long practice and peace walk across New York City’s five boroughs, alongside indigenous, multi-faith leaders, teachers, and community organizations. On the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the United States and as a response to domestic and global crises—wars, genocide, climate crisis, anti-immigrant policies, authoritarianism, etc.—the pilgrimage highlights interdependence and mutual belonging.

The organizing team states, “We resist supremacy and violence of all forms by insisting on love for one another and a deep sense of belonging for each and every being. We resist by insisting on our inter-being, on non-separation. May our choices and actions on this day and on all days come from this insistence. May we respond to the crises of these times from this insistence.”

 

All are welcome to join the entire pilgrimage or parts of it. Peace walks on the same day are also happening in Austin, TX, and New Orleans, LA. Full list of collaborators is on the pilgrimage’s website: www.mahasanghanyc.com.

 

Members of the organizing team. Image Credit – Mahasangha NYC

A continuous, collaborative statement to live on beyond July 12th. Image Credit – Mahasangha NYC

 

Cards will be offered to those witnessing the pilgrimage, as a gesture of gratitude, to help plant and water seeds of interdependence. Image Credit – Mahasangha NYC

Banner Image:  A continuous, collaborative statement to live on beyond July 12th. Image Credit – Mahasangha NYC


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