National gathering of Buddhist communities across Canada, held on Parliament Hill, supporting Heritage Month recognition.

Joint Statement

Cultural Recognition, Not Religious Privilege

The position of this initiative is clear.

We are seeking cultural recognition, not religious privilege.

The proposal for Canadian Buddhist Heritage Month is not a request for special treatment for any religious group. It is based on long-standing cultural contributions that warrant appropriate recognition within Canada’s multicultural framework.

This initiative is grounded in principles of rational dialogue, inclusivity, and constructive public engagement.

Civic Engagement

For decades, Buddhist communities across Canada have actively participated in public life through a wide range of contributions, including:

  • education and cultural transmission
  • charitable work and social services
  • community building and public programming

These contributions are consistent, visible, and ongoing.

Buddhist communities are not only cultural contributors. They are active participants in building a stable and engaged civil society.

Alignment with Canadian Values

The core values reflected in Buddhist culture include:

  • Respect
  • Responsibility
  • Harmony

These values align closely with the foundational principles of Canada’s multicultural framework.

They contribute meaningfully to:

  • social cohesion
  • intercultural understanding
  • constructive public dialogue

Contribution to a Multicultural Society

Buddhist communities have played an active and ongoing role in Canada’s cultural and social development.

Their contributions include:

  • cultural programming and public festivals
  • education and knowledge sharing
  • charitable initiatives and partnerships
  • community service and cross-cultural engagement

These contributions are now an established part of Canada’s multicultural landscape.

Towards Canadian Buddhist Heritage Month

The central goal of this initiative is to support the formal recognition of Canadian Buddhist Heritage Month.

Through federal-level recognition, we aim to:

  • integrate existing cultural contributions into Canada’s public cultural framework
  • establish a stable and long-term structure for cultural recognition
  • strengthen public understanding and respect for Buddhist heritage

This is a forward-looking initiative based on existing social contributions and long-term development.

 Legislative Progress

2025

Petition Status

The petition process is currently underway and continues to gain attention and support from communities and representatives across Canada.

Ongoing efforts are focused on increasing visibility at both the public and institutional levels.

2026

Next Steps

Expand national-level community alignment

Strengthen communication with public institutions and policy stakeholders

Advance the initiative into more structured policy discussions

2026

Engagement with Members of Parliament

We are actively engaging with Members of Parliament and relevant policy stakeholders through structured and constructive dialogue.

These efforts are focused on:

  • building cross-community understanding
  • strengthening institutional awareness
  • advancing the initiative toward formal recognition

A Constructive Path Forward

The Canadian Buddhist Heritage Month initiative is built on long-standing cultural practice and sustained civic participation.

We believe that through rational, inclusive, and collaborative engagement, it is possible to advance meaningful cultural recognition within Canada’s existing institutional framework.

This initiative is not only a reflection of past contributions.

It is a constructive investment in the future of Canada’s public cultural development.

Signatories