Center for Remembering & Sharing

New York, United States

4

Closed now

6 reviews

Accepts Credit Cards

Map

Streetview

Activate map

Bussiness info

Accepts Credit Cards
Yes
Wheelchair Accessible
No
By Appointment Only
No

Description

Specialties

We specialize in rental spaces for artist and instructors and an array of yoga and mediation classes. Enjoy peace of mind while seeing your clients or teaching – or taking – a workshop or class at our healing & arts center, a calm oasis steps from Union Square! We rent our private session room and two lovely studios to numerous meetup/​support groups, therapists, instructors and artists.

We also offer our own form of spiritual healing/​counseling as well as relaxed and intimate classes in meditation, yoga, A Course in Miracles, and dance for all ages, and film screenings, arts exhibitions, performances and other community events. Stop by for a quick orientation and learn how you can make CRS your home, too!

History

Established in 2004.

CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) is a community center opened in 2004 by writer/​lecturer/​healer Yasuko Kasaki, her students, and artist/​producer Christopher Pelham in order to provide artists and individuals from all walks of life with opportunities to remember and share their limitless creative energies. Since its opening, CRS has been located at 123 4th Ave, 2nd FL in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village, just south of Union Square. Over the years, CRS has also presented seminars in Westchester and NJ and throughout Japan.

Meet the Business Owner

Yasuko K.

Business Owner

In 1999 Ms. Kasaki began offering spiritual counseling, reading, instruction and healing based on A Course in Miracles to individuals and groups and in 2004 opened CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing). She has since written 14 books on A Course in Miracles, published by Natural Spirit, Inc.

Born in Tokyo, she attended Gakushuin University, Tokyo, from which she graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Japanese language and Japanese literature and a Teacher’s Certificate in junior high and high school education. Befrore graduating, her photo essay of street kids, Harajuku Takenoko-​zoku, was published by Daisan Shokan Ltd. Shortly thereafter, she began working as an editor for the women’s monthly magazine Free. This opportunity in turn opened the door to a series of freelance jobs as writer, translator, and photographer for numerous magazines and companies. She then published a number of novels and collections of essays.