
One Roof. Every Tradition.
Where the brass bell rings at dawn, marigold garlands stay fresh, and two hundred families share prasad every Sunday.
The Center is Moving.
Real initiatives, live progress, and open doors — your participation is the missing piece.
Mandir Expansion — Phase II
The prayer hall serves 340 families but was built for 80. We're doubling the sanctuary, adding a dedicated children's learning wing, and creating a permanent langar kitchen.
Navratri 2026
Nine nights of devotion, garba, and celebration

Bal Vikas — Fall 2026
Sanskrit shlokas, Ramayana storytelling, and value-based education for children ages 5–16. Sundays, 9–11 AM.
Youth Mentorship Cohort
Pairing college-age youth with community elders for monthly wisdom sessions, career guidance, and cultural leadership. Cohort 4 opens this week — 8 spots.
Langar Seva — This Sunday
We need 6 more volunteers to help plate and serve prasad for 200+ families this Sunday. The kitchen fills with ghee and gratitude by 8 AM.
Every Week,
Something Sacred
Twelve programs, one roof. From the child learning their first shloka to the elder teaching their hundredth student.

Sunday Satsang
Every Sunday · 10 AM
Bhajans, pravachan, and community darshan. The anchor of our week — 340 families, one prayer, one hour that carries you through seven days.

Bharatanatyam
Saturdays · Ages 6+
Classical dance rooted in devotion. Our students performed at the state cultural festival last year.

Vedic Chanting
Wednesdays · 7 PM
Hanuman Chalisa, Vishnu Sahasranamam, and Sundarkand recitation. All levels welcome.

Langar Kitchen
Sundays · 12 PM
Two hundred people. One kitchen. Volunteers who know that feeding is the highest form of prayer. No one leaves hungry.
Eighteen Years of
Sacred Moments
Every photo here is a family that found its footing. Every number represents someone who showed up.

Diwali 2025
1,200 diyas lit. One evening that felt like home.

Phase I Complete
New prayer hall opened March 2025 — built entirely through community donations.
Holi 2025
400 children, 200 colors, and one grandmother who said she hadn't laughed like that in years.

Bal Vikas Graduation
Class of 2025 — 34 students completed three years of Sanskrit and Vedic studies.
The People Who
Make It Sacred
“My daughter was born in New Jersey. She recited the Sundarkand at her school assembly last year. That didn't happen in a vacuum — it happened because of Sangam.”
“I moved here for grad school and didn't know anyone. The first Sunday I walked into satsang, an aunty handed me prasad before I even sat down. I've been coming back for four years.”
“My husband and I are both retired. We cook langar every Sunday. This kitchen is where we feel most useful. Most alive. Most ourselves.”
The sideline is the
harder choice.
Three hundred and forty families found something here. Your path — whether satsang, Bal Vikas, seva, or the building fund — is waiting.