02/18/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 02/18/2026 13:29
From October to mid-February, the Venerable Buddhist monks of the Dhammacetiya Huong Dao Vipassana Bhavana Center of Fort Worth, Texas walked more than 2,300 miles to Washington, D.C. Known as the Walk for Peace, their goal was to raise awareness of the global need for peace as well as how we can practice and foster peace in our own lives and neighborhoods.
Students from the Carter School accompanied the monks to the Chùa Hoa Nghiêm temple. Photo providedOn February 8and 9, students and staff from George Mason University's Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution gathered together in the cold and wind to greet and witness the Walk for Peace.
The monks, ranging in age from 29-68, represent monasteries and temples from around the globe. In past years, they have gathered for walks in other locations across the globe, including India, Cambodia, and Thailand. They gather when there is a sense that the world is in crisis, and peace is especially needed.
On Sunday, February 8, Carter School undergraduates Angelina Di Matteo and Grace McIntyre traveled to Fort Belvoir, Virginia, to greet the monks as they arrived for their lunch break at the Chùa Hoa Nghiêm temple. Carter School doctoral student Heather Rosso, who studies U.S. mass violence, extremism, and coercive control, was one of the volunteers escorting the monks as they arrived at the temple.
Mason community members greeted the Walk for Peace. Photo by Evan Cantwell/Office of University BrandingThe next day, February 9, one of the last days of the walk, George Mason students, members of the Carter School, and Mason Square faculty and staff greeted the monks as they passed by Vernon Smith Hall at Mason Square in Arlington, Virginia. They were joined by the Rotarians from District 7620. The Rotary is a Carter School partner organization, as both share a mission of fostering peace locally and globally. Participants laid yellow flower petals along the monks' path, and greeted them with a banner, flowers, and signs representing the Carter School for peace studies.
The gathering was an incredible experience filled with "fellowship, hope, peacefulness, healing, resilience," said Shirley Al-Jarani, director of operations for the George Mason University Instructional Foundation (GMUIF). Al-Jarani captured the experience well when she recalled, "The hope I felt as a group of virtual strangers [as we] talked in fellowship getting to know each other realizing we may never meet again but we were connected in that moment and stood together in solidarity for peace and hope."
Carter School members welcomed the Walk for Peace with a banner. Photo provided