Mosaic: Interfaith Youth Action
This data was last updated on 10 Mar 2026.
Address: P.O Box 610059 Newton Highlands, MA 02461
Phone: 508-942-1855
Email: info@mosaicaction.org
Website: mosaicaction.org
Mission: For over a decade, Mosaic: Interfaith Youth Action has brought young people from diverse religious communities together across differences to contribute to the common good. Mosaic uses an interfaith lens as both a call to action and basis for its mission: “To bridge society’s divides, creating more just, peaceful, and equitable communities through interfaith connection and action.”
Description: Mosaic: Interfaith Youth Action is a Boston-based nonprofit committed to advancing religious pluralism through youth leadership, dialogue, and collaborative service. Founded in 2010 as Kids4Peace Boston, the organization initially focused on interfaith relationship-building among Jewish, Christian, and Muslim youth. In 2022, it was rebranded as Mosaic: Interfaith Youth Action to reflect an expanded interfaith scope and a deeper emphasis on civic engagement and youth-led initiatives.
Mosaic’s programming centers youth voice as a primary driver of its work. Participants are trained not only as dialogue partners but as facilitators, designers of service projects, and public leaders responding to contemporary challenges such as religious intolerance and social polarization.
Core annual programs include MLK Service Learning Day, which integrates interfaith dialogue with community service inspired by the legacy of Dr. King; Circles of Action, sustained small-group dialogue cohorts; Bridges, an initiative that brings together youth from various traditions through dialogue and collaborative art; and the Interfaith Culinary Arts Program, which uses food traditions to explore religious identity, hospitality, and shared practice.
Through experiential education that integrates dialogue, art, and service, Mosaic cultivates young leaders equipped to engage religious difference constructively and to contribute to a more pluralistic civic culture in Greater Boston.