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Kahanamoku is almost a saint himself in these parts, credited with bringing surfing in the 1920s to a beachfront town that now calls itself Surf City. His annual prayers, meanwhile, have come to be carried out informally over the years by riders who hit the waves before heading off to church on Sunday. Mondor said that's what helped inspire Sunday's church-sponsored blessing. "I've talked to a lot of surfers who have said, 'Yeah, that's my best prayer time,'" the longboard rider said of Sunday morning prayer circles on the beach. As a result, the church decided to open the blessing up to everybody, and representatives of the Jewish, Islamic and Mormon faiths were also on hand to offer prayers. It is planned to be an annual event. "The ocean is such an important part of our lives. We're all one planet, one world, we're one people, so I think this is a wonderful idea," said Fawad Yacoob of the Islamic Society of Orange County. Of the approximately 400 people who witnessed the blessing, only a couple dozen came with boards and wet suits. But many said they recognized what Munoz, the 43-year-old priest who has been riding the breaks up and down the California coast for more than 20 years, calls "real parallels to spirituality and surfing." "It's not exactly like church," said Rob Briggs as he stood on the sand with his board. "But when you get out there past the break," he continued, "it clears your mind of anything troubling you. Worries of everyday life just go away."
[Associated
Press;
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