Five years. Five gatherings. Five unbroken expressions of a single, unwavering intention — that peace is possible, that prayer is powerful, and that when human beings come together in sincere devotion to the healing of the world, something real and transformative occurs. The Fifth World Peace Prayer Event, organized by Amala Center Nepal in 2025, marked not only a personal milestone for the organization but a moment of genuine evolution — the point at which a local tradition rooted in the spiritual soil of Nepal reached outward across oceans and continents to embrace a truly global dimension.
Held once again at the incomparable Boudhanath Stupa in Kathmandu — that ancient, ever-watchful sanctuary whose all-seeing eyes have presided over centuries of prayer and pilgrimage — this fifth gathering brought with it something new and enormously significant: an international collaboration with Zero Point Meditation of the United States, and the continued co-organizational partnership of the beloved Bhuval Dada Youth Club. Together, these partnerships transformed what had always been a deeply meaningful local and national event into something that now resonated on a genuinely worldwide scale.
Five Years of Unbroken Commitment
To fully appreciate the significance of the Fifth World Peace Prayer Event, one must pause and honor the journey that led to it. When Amala Center Nepal organized its first World Peace Prayer Event in 2020, the world was in the grip of unprecedented disruption. To gather in prayer at such a moment required courage, faith, and a deep conviction that spiritual practice is not a retreat from the world’s problems — it is one of the most powerful responses to them.
Each year that followed brought its own challenges and its own gifts. The second event deepened the tradition. The third, held at Boudhanath, elevated it to new spiritual heights. The fourth, at the new Amala Center location on Arab Bank Road, embedded it into the identity of the organization’s own home. And now, in 2025, the fifth — reaching beyond Nepal’s borders for the first time in formal international collaboration — announced to the world that this tradition had not only survived and grown, but had matured into something with genuine global relevance and reach.
Five consecutive years of organizing this event is itself an achievement worthy of deep respect and celebration. It speaks to the organizational resilience, spiritual commitment, and community trust that Amala Center Nepal has cultivated steadily and quietly over half a decade. Many initiatives begin with great enthusiasm and fade after a year or two. The World Peace Prayer Event has only grown stronger, more purposeful, and more beautiful with each passing year.
Zero Point Meditation — A Bridge Across Oceans
The collaboration with Zero Point Meditation of the United States represented a landmark moment in the history of Amala Center Nepal and its World Peace Prayer Event series. It was the first time the organization had formally partnered with an international entity for this gathering — and the choice of partner was deeply fitting.
Zero Point Meditation brings to this collaboration a philosophy and practice rooted in the understanding that consciousness itself is the ground of peace — that by returning awareness to its most fundamental, open, and undivided nature, human beings can access a state of stillness that naturally gives rise to compassion, clarity, and harmonious action in the world. This vision aligns beautifully and organically with the spiritual aspirations that have always animated Amala Center Nepal’s World Peace Prayer Events.
The partnership with Zero Point Meditation enriched the Fifth World Peace Prayer Event in several profound ways:
- International Visibility and Reach: The collaboration brought the event to the attention of a global audience that extends far beyond Nepal’s borders — meditators, practitioners, and peace advocates across the United States and beyond who are part of the Zero Point Meditation community. This exponentially widened the circle of intention surrounding the event, ensuring that prayers and meditations were being offered not only by those physically present at Boudhanath, but by fellow practitioners around the world holding the same intention simultaneously.
- Cross-Cultural Spiritual Exchange: When practitioners from different cultural and contemplative traditions come together around a shared intention, something uniquely powerful happens. The meeting of Himalayan Buddhist prayer traditions with the meditation philosophy of Zero Point created a rich and fertile spiritual dialogue — one in which different approaches to the same fundamental aspiration illuminated and deepened each other in unexpected and beautiful ways.
- Shared Expertise and Experience: Zero Point Meditation brought to the collaboration its own body of knowledge, experience, and methodology around meditation and contemplative practice. This contributed new dimensions to the event’s programming and offered participants a broader, more diverse palette of practices through which to engage with the shared intention of world peace.
- A Model for Future Collaboration: Perhaps most significantly, this partnership established a precedent and a model for future international collaboration — demonstrating that Amala Center Nepal is ready, willing, and capable of working with global partners to amplify its mission and extend its impact far beyond what any single organization could achieve alone.
Bhuval Dada Youth Club — The Heart of Local Community
Alongside the exciting new international dimension brought by the Zero Point Meditation collaboration, the continued co-organizational partnership of Bhuval Dada Youth Club grounded the Fifth World Peace Prayer Event firmly in the local community that has always been its most essential foundation.
Bhuval Dada Youth Club’s involvement in this event was not new — this youth-led organization had already partnered with Amala Center Nepal in previous community initiatives, including the Mother’s Day Community Event. Their continued presence as co-organizer of the World Peace Prayer Event series spoke to a relationship of genuine trust, mutual respect, and shared values that had been built and strengthened over time.
The Youth Club’s contribution to the event was invaluable on multiple levels:
- Community Mobilization: With deep roots in the local community, Bhuval Dada Youth Club brought the kind of grassroots reach and community trust that no external organization can replicate. Their involvement ensured that the event remained genuinely connected to the people and neighborhoods it ultimately sought to serve.
- Youth Energy and Leadership: The presence and leadership of a youth organization at an event dedicated to world peace carried its own powerful symbolic meaning — a visible reminder that the next generation is not passive in the face of the world’s challenges, but actively engaged in the work of building something better.
- Organizational Capacity: The practical contributions of the Youth Club to event organization, logistics, and community outreach were essential to the smooth running of a gathering that had grown significantly in scale and complexity with the addition of an international collaborative dimension.
- Continuity and Relationship: Bhuval Dada Youth Club’s ongoing partnership with Amala Center Nepal reflected the kind of sustained, relationship-based collaboration that creates lasting community impact — a reminder that the most meaningful work is done not through one-off interactions, but through relationships built patiently over time.
Return to Boudhanath — Sacred Ground, New Heights
The decision to return to Boudhanath Stupa for the Fifth World Peace Prayer Event was both a homecoming and a statement. Boudhanath had already proven itself, at the Third World Peace Prayer Event, to be a uniquely powerful and appropriate setting for this gathering — a place whose spiritual energy amplifies intention, whose sacred atmosphere deepens practice, and whose global recognition as a UNESCO World Heritage Site lends the event a visibility and significance that extends well beyond Nepal.
To return to Boudhanath for the fifth gathering — this time with an international partner standing alongside — was to bring the full journey of the World Peace Prayer Event series full circle in a sense, while simultaneously opening it to an entirely new horizon. The ancient stupa, with its timeless eyes gazing serenely in all four directions, seemed a perfectly appropriate witness to this moment of transition — from local tradition to global movement, from Nepali community event to international collaborative gathering.
Boudhanath’s all-seeing eyes, which have watched over countless generations of pilgrims and practitioners, now looked out over a gathering that included not only the familiar faces of the Nepali community, but the extended global family of practitioners connected through the Zero Point Meditation partnership — a community of shared intention that stretched from the foothills of the Himalayas to the cities and meditation centers of North America and beyond.
A Gathering of Diverse and Committed Participants
The Fifth World Peace Prayer Event drew together a richly diverse assembly of participants, united by their shared commitment to prayer, meditation, and the vision of a more peaceful world:
- Monks and Spiritual Leaders whose lifelong practice and deep familiarity with sacred prayer traditions anchored the gathering in authentic spiritual authority and devotion.
- Local Community Members from Kathmandu and the surrounding areas who have been the faithful heart of this event since its very first gathering in 2020.
- International Practitioners connected through the Zero Point Meditation partnership, bringing global perspectives, diverse meditation traditions, and the energy of a worldwide community of peace-seekers.
- Youth Representatives from Bhuval Dada Youth Club, whose presence ensured that the voices and energy of the next generation were woven into the fabric of the gathering.
- New Participants encountering the World Peace Prayer Event for the first time — drawn by the growing reputation of the gathering and the exciting international dimension of its fifth edition.
Together, this diverse assembly embodied the event’s deepest aspiration — that peace is not the concern of any one nation, tradition, or generation, but a universal human longing that transcends all boundaries and calls all people into its service.
The Global Reach of a Local Tradition
The Fifth World Peace Prayer Event represented, in many ways, the fulfillment of a vision that has been present in Amala Center Nepal’s work from the very beginning — the vision that the prayers and practices cultivated within this community in Nepal are not meant only for Nepal, but are offerings to the entire world.
By formalizing its first international collaboration, the organization took a decisive step toward realizing that vision. The event’s global reach — extended through the Zero Point Meditation partnership to practitioners and peace-seekers across the United States and beyond — meant that the circle of intention surrounding this gathering was wider than it had ever been. More hearts. More minds. More prayers. More light directed toward the healing of a world in need.
And yet, for all its new international dimension, the Fifth World Peace Prayer Event remained unmistakably rooted in the values, relationships, and community that have made it what it is. The monks still chanted. The stupa still presided. The prayers still rose. The dedication of merit still flowed outward to all beings. The local community, represented faithfully by Bhuval Dada Youth Club, was still at the heart of everything.
This balance — between the local and the global, between the ancient and the contemporary, between the deeply rooted and the far-reaching — is perhaps the most beautiful thing about the Fifth World Peace Prayer Event. It showed that a tradition can grow without losing itself. That a community can open to the world without abandoning its home. That peace, in the end, is both the most intimate and the most universal of human aspirations.
Looking Ahead — A Global Movement Takes Shape
As the Fifth World Peace Prayer Event drew to its close and participants carried its blessings into the world, Amala Center Nepal stood at a genuinely new threshold. Five years of dedicated practice had built something real — a tradition with depth, a community with trust, and now, for the first time, an international network with reach.
The partnerships forged and strengthened through this fifth gathering — with Zero Point Meditation, with Bhuval Dada Youth Club, with the wider community of practitioners and peace-seekers who participated near and far — are the seeds of what may, in the years ahead, grow into something even larger and more impactful than what has already been achieved.
Amala Center Nepal looks forward to the sixth gathering, and the seventh, and all those that will follow — each one deeper, wider, and more powerful than the last. Each one a renewed commitment to the belief that prayer matters, that peace is possible, and that when human beings gather in sincere devotion to the healing of the world, the world — slowly, quietly, but really — heals.