
Programs at
Kirtan Temple · New York, NY
A sacred home for kirtan and bhakti yoga in NYC.
The Bhakti Center sits on First Avenue in Manhattan's East Village, a six-story sanctuary where ancient devotional practice meets contemporary urban life. Established in 2010 by His Holiness Radhanath Swami, a New York Times bestselling author and spiritual teacher in the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition, the Center occupies a lineage-saturated corner of New York. This is the same neighborhood where Srila A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada first brought kirtan to the West in 1966, chanting the Hare Krishna mantra under the elm tree in Tompkins Square Park. The devotees paid off the building's mortgage in full in December 2019, a milestone marked with ceremony as Radhanath Swami offered a copy of the deed to the presiding deities Sri Sri Radha-Muralidhara and Gaurachandra.
Descend the basement stairs and you enter a different acoustic universe. The building houses state-of-the-art yoga and meditation studios renovated in 2019 by designers from Sydney, Australia, alongside a third-floor temple room that functions as one of Manhattan's only traditional Vaishnava Hindu temples. The temple space features devotional artwork, a library of yogic texts, and twice-weekly kirtans drawing musicians from across the city and beyond. On Tuesday and Thursday nights, harmoniums and mridangas create what practitioners describe as "healing and uplifting sound", guided call-and-response chanting designed to induce meditative states through mantra, rhythm, and live instrumentation.
The Center's ground floor houses Divya's Kitchen, a highly rated vegetarian restaurant serving Ayurvedic cuisine, with reviewers consistently praising its "spiritually-charged, plant-based food." The building also includes the Amrita Boutique, stocked with harmoniums, kartals, deity paraphernalia, Ayurvedic products, and fair-wage block-print clothing made by village women in India. A rooftop garden offers sunset yoga among vegetables and flowers, what staff call "the perfect eco-oasis" above Manhattan's density.
The Center is an affiliate of ISKCON (the International Society for Krishna Consciousness) but operates with a broader cultural arts mission. Programs include multilevel vinyasa yoga classes taught by instructors including Syama Masla and Dhyana, kirtan training workshops (Foundations of Kirtan, Voice of Devotion, Explorations of Kirtan), Community Groups that meet in members' homes for four-month semesters studying the Bhagavad-gita, 12-step recovery rooted in bhakti principles, meal distribution, and regular wisdom lectures. The Vani School provides online courses in Ayurveda, yoga philosophy, and kirtan.
Executive Director Virabhadra Tansey and Finance Director Sundarnath Das lead the management team. Event coordinator Tatiana Kiseleva receives consistent praise in wedding reviews for her professionalism and grace. The Center maintains an explicitly inclusive stance: "The Bhakti Center aims to celebrate the uniqueness of every individual, no matter their race, religion, gender, sexuality. Every person is welcomed on the equal level of the soul."
Radhanath Swami received a citation from New York City Mayor Eric Adams in June 2025 recognizing his contributions to spiritual upliftment, social service, environmental sustainability, and interfaith harmony. The Center runs on donated time and subsidized or free programming to ensure accessibility. In 2019, a June fundraiser featuring kirtan artist Jahnavi Harrison and Radhanath Swami raised $200,000 toward building ownership. The rhythms are urban and devotional at once: morning arati at dawn, yoga flowing through the day, kirtan at night, and the constant hum of seekers moving between temple, studio, restaurant, and street.
What's Happening
2 programs scheduled at The Bhakti Center
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