The A Rocha Peru team with the students of the primary school (June, 2025)
During the month of June, more than 100 students from various educational institutions in Pacasmayo took part in educational workshops on the dry forest, designed to awaken their love and respect for the environment around them.
Through games, interactive activities, and practical examples, the children not only learned but also understood the importance of the algarrobo tree and local biodiversity, both essential to the health of their communities and the balance of the ecosystem. Recognizing the value of what grows close to home is also recognizing their identity and their role as caretakers of the land.
The most inspiring part was seeing their ideas bloom: many presented creative proposals to protect the dry forest, showing not only understanding, but deep commitment. With each workshop, the desire to keep sowing hope grows stronger. Because when education connects with the land, it also takes root in the heart.
The classroom transformed into a forest full of stories, aromas, and living memories. At the Igoriteshiari Primary School, in the Native Community of Monte Carmelo, a deeply enriching experience took place: educational workshops on medicinal plants, guided by a local elder—an ancestral keeper of the forest’s healing secrets.
Second Medicinal Plants Workshop at the Igoriteshiari Primary School (June, 2025)
Over the course of this trimester, two workshops have been held, benefiting more than 40 kids, from this school. In each session, students learned which plants help soothe stomach pain, which promote sleep, and which ones need to be protected because they’re becoming scarce. Every plant shared carried a story, a family memory, a lesson on how to care not only for the body but also for the environment.
More than just workshops, these were acts of cultural transmission. For many children, it was the first time they heard someone speak with such respect and depth about the medicine that comes from the forest—medicine that has healed generations before them. The elder didn’t just explain the properties of the plants; he taught them to see the forest with new eyes: not as a mere resource, but as an ally to be respected and protected.
Promoted by A Rocha Peru, these spaces aim to revalue traditional medicine as a vital part of local knowledge, to promote forest care, and to strengthen cultural pride in the living heritage of Amazonian communities.
From A Rocha Peru’s Green Church Project, we continue to sow ecological awareness within faith communities. As part of this commitment, we are excited to present a new quiz “How Green Is Your Church?” — a simple yet powerful resource designed to help churches reflect on how they are living out their call to care for God’s creation.
This questionnaire is born from a deep conviction: that to worship the Creator is also to care for what He lovingly made. “God has given us the responsibility to care for creation (Genesis 2:15),” says Hannah, coordinator of the Green Church Project. “But how can you know where to go if you don’t know where you are?” she adds, pointing to the importance of having a starting point for evaluation and growth.
The quiz is short and practical, with yes-or-no questions grouped into four essential areas of church life:
Worship of the Creator
Teaching
Community Life
Relationship with Nature
Hannah Wilkinson, Green Church Coordinator (July, 2025)
Beyond measuring, the goal is to inspire. “The idea is not for people to feel judged, but encouraged. That they can see what they’re already doing well, and choose one area to improve or change,” Hannah explains. Because even the smallest steps can make a difference on the journey toward a greener church.
Though it’s primarily aimed at leaders, the quiz is open to the whole community. “Caring for God’s creation is the responsibility of the whole church, not just our leaders,” Hannah affirms with conviction.
Those who complete the quiz can opt to receive free materials, including a guide for incorporating creation care into worship, an introduction to the theology of environmental stewardship, and personalized support tailored to the church’s needs. “The church decides how much or how little contact they want to have with us,” Hannah emphasizes, promoting a respectful and flexible relationship.
Although this quiz was just recently launched, we have already witnessed the deep impact that creation care initiatives can have when sown with intention. Last year, through the Kawsay mini-project in Ayacucho, we saw the rise of a vibrant and committed movement of creation stewards. Today, that same spirit continues: members of Cristo Rey Church in Huanta, who were part of that experience, have chosen to replicate the project internally this year. It’s proof that a well-planted seed can bear lasting fruit — transforming not just practices, but hearts.
The dream is clear: to build a nationwide network of green churches — connected, committed, and ready to walk together in this ecological journey. “When things feel overwhelming, we need to support each other. We walk together, for the glory of God,” concludes Hannah.
In La Libertad, in northern Peru, one of the country’s most threatened and least understood ecosystems survives: the dry forest. Though it may seem barren at first glance, this landscape holds immense natural and cultural wealth. Among emblematic trees like algarrobo, faique, and sapote, unique species—many of them endangered—depend on this environment to survive. However, the forest faces a constant threat: illegal logging, unsustainable firewood extraction, wildfires, and the progressive loss of vegetation cover have put its ecological balance at risk. This degradation not only harms biodiversity but also impacts the local communities who rely on the forest for water, shade, food, medicine, and a deep sense of identity.
Virgilio and Víctor, the new guardians of the dry forest (May, 2025)
In response to this reality, A Rocha Peru has taken action with a deeply community-based vision. Since April, we have formalized the creation of a Local Park Rangers team, an initiative that seeks to generate solutions from within the territory, led by those who know and love it.
Through targeted training, patrol protocols, and technical support, this team—currently led by Virgilio and Víctor—conducts regular patrols through the forest. Between May and June alone, they carried out over 35 patrols. Their presence helps prevent logging, detect threats, and raise awareness among other members of the community.
But beyond surveillance, what’s being cultivated is a renewed sense of belonging and collective responsibility. As they walk through the forest, these rangers aren’t just protecting trees—they are safeguarding the memory of an ecosystem that has endured droughts, neglect, and abandonment.
At a time when ecosystems are disappearing in silence, initiatives like this speak out. Because when the care of creation starts from within, with empowered local actors, conservation is not only possible—it is sustainable and transformative.