A call to peace rings out in Wassaic

WASSAIC — Wassaic’s World Peace Prayer Society hosted its annual Peace Festival at the World Peace Sanctuary on Sunday, Sept. 25, to pray for gratitude and peace in celebration of the International Day of Peace holiday, which is held every year on Sept. 21.The event included international music, dance performances, prayers for Japan’s recovery from the devastating March 11 tsunami and earthquake disaster and an interactive flag ceremony.During the flag ceremony, attendants held flags from every country in the world and chanted “May peace prevail on earth,” invoking the power of the words to help create positive energy around their cause.The organizers also used the flag ceremony as a platform to dedicate a peace pole to South Sudan, the world’s newest country, which gained independence from Sudan in early July.The South Sudan peace pole will join the peace poles for all of the other countries, which line a walking path in the peace sanctuary.One of the event’s organizers, Jim Dugan, said that the organization has made a big deal out of South Sudan’s new statehood to help inform people about one of the ways peace has been given to people in Sudan and South Sudan, where brutal civil wars have been raging since the 1950s.Dugan said that the purpose of the peace festival is to encourage people to take peace home with them and keep peace in their daily lives.“When they leave here, they will remember to keep peace in their hearts,” he said. “The more we know as humans, the more we realize that peace is the direction we have to go.”Although attendance was down slightly from previous years, Dugan said he was happy with the event. “I could always hope for more in this day and age to support peace, but everyone who is here is exactly who is supposed to be here,” he said.Lama Rangbar Nyimai Özer attended the peace festival to help create the causes for peace.Özer believes that when people come together for a specific cause, that action paired with the intention will help create the desired outcome.“Truly there is no such thing as peace for one country, one ethnic group, et cetera, until the names of war, sickness, famine and suffering are no longer heard anywhere for anyone. For this, everyone must come together in the name of peace and get to know each other’s diversity,” he said.Özer represents one of the many peace organizations that attended the festival. He is the executive director of the Bodhivastu Foundation, which plans on building the Great American Stupa for Peace, which is a building designed to emanate positive energy for peace. It will be built near Pleasant Valley.The peace sanctuary in Wassaic is the headquarters of the World Peace Prayer Society. The society is a nonreligious not-for-profit organization whose goal is to unite the hearts of people through the universal message and prayer, “May peace prevail on earth.”

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