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Buddhist monks arrive in Washington on 2,300-mile Walk for Peace

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Dressed in burnt-orange robes, around two dozen Buddhist monks reached Washington, D.C., on Tuesday (Feb 10) as part of a 2,300-mile “Walk for Peace”, a spiritual trek spanning nine states that has drawn cheering crowds along the route.

At a stop in Richmond, Virginia, on Feb 3, 74-year-old Bob Anderson said he felt compelled to show up. “With everything going on in our country and our world, you have to back peace in every way you can,” he said. “This felt like a good way to do that.”

The group set out from Texas more than three months ago, pushing on through biting winter weather, sometimes walking barefoot, to spread messages of peace, loving-kindness and compassion across the United States and beyond.

They kept moving even as a major winter storm swept across wide parts of the country, bringing heavy snow, sleet and freezing rain from the Ohio Valley and the mid-South up to New England, alongside a blast of Arctic cold.

Joined by a rescue dog named Aloka, the monks have been walking at a time of rising tension in the United States, including disputes linked to President Donald Trump’s hardline immigration approach, National Guard deployments in some cities, and fatal incidents involving federal agents.

We walk not to protest, but to awaken the peace that already lives within each of us,” said Bhikkhu Pannakara, the walk’s spiritual leader. He described the journey as a reminder that unity and kindness start within individuals and can spread outward to families, communities and society.

The monks are due to spend Tuesday and Wednesday in Washington before ending their journey on Thursday in nearby Annapolis, Maryland.

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