The Awara are a highland people of Morobe Province in Papua New Guinea, living in villages scattered across the southern slopes of the Finisterre Range along the east and west sides of the Leron River basin. Their territory sits in rugged, forested foothills that rise from the Markham Valley toward the peaks of one of Papua New Guinea's most dramatic mountain ranges. The Finisterre Range has historically served as both a boundary and a backdrop for the communities that call its slopes home, shaping the character of life there — its relative isolation, its dependence on the land, and the tight bonds of village community.
The Awara speak their own language, also called Awara, which belongs to the Finisterre-Huon branch of the Trans-New Guinea language family. It is part of a dialect continuum with the neighboring Wantoat language, though the two are distinct enough that speakers cannot simply understand one another without effort. The Awara language has been the subject of linguistic study, and Bible portions have been translated and made available in Awara, alongside audio Scripture resources accessible through digital platforms.
Outsiders first made sustained contact with communities in this region during the colonial era, and Lutheran missionaries were among the early Christian workers to reach the peoples of the Finisterre foothills. The completion of an airstrip in the Awara valley in later decades brought greater access to government services, education, and trade, connecting a previously isolated people to the wider life of Papua New Guinea.
Life among the Awara is shaped by the demands and rhythms of the land. Subsistence gardening is the foundation of daily existence, with families cultivating taro, sweet potato, and other staple crops on the hillside gardens that surround their villages. Hunting in the surrounding forest has traditionally supplemented the diet, though game has grown less plentiful over time. The introduction of coffee as a cash crop brought an important new dimension to the Awara economy, and the construction of an airstrip made it possible to move coffee out of the valley and connect the community to markets that would otherwise have been unreachable given the difficulty of the terrain.
The Awara place a high value on group harmony and consensus. Community life is ordered around shared decision-making, and the church has become a central gathering point not only for worship but for the discussion of village concerns and the resolution of conflicts. All local government functions — meetings, community work projects, and similar matters — are organized at community church gatherings, while regional government matters are also discussed at regional church meetings. Sil This close integration of church and community life reflects how deeply Christian faith has been woven into Awara social structures over the generations.
Villages are small and closely knit, with extended family and clan relationships shaping daily obligations and social identity. Tok Pisin is widely understood and used alongside the Awara language, particularly for communication with neighboring peoples and with the broader institutions of Papua New Guinea society.
The great majority of the Awara identify as Christians, and the church occupies a central place in community life. The Awara people value group harmony, consensus, and religion, and they attend church every Sunday. Sil For many, Christian practice is not simply a private matter but a shared community commitment expressed through regular worship, collective prayer, and the expectation that leaders in both church and civic life will reflect a Christian character.
Before the arrival of Christianity, the peoples of the Finisterre foothills, like others across Papua New Guinea, held beliefs centered on a spirit world that was understood to be active and present in daily life. Ancestral spirits were believed to influence the welfare of the living, and traditional practices sought to maintain right relationship with those unseen forces. As Christianity spread through the region, many of these older frameworks gave way, though in communities across Papua New Guinea the process of integrating Christian faith with inherited custom is rarely simple or complete. A small portion of the Awara community continues to hold to ethnic religious practices alongside or apart from Christian profession.
The need among the Awara today is not for initial gospel witness but for the gospel to take deeper root — producing not merely Christian identity but genuine transformation of heart, family, and community life in the light of scripture.
The Awara have received the gospel and organized their community life significantly around the church. Yet the presence of Christian institutions is not the same as the deep formation that comes from knowing and living by God's Word. Bible portions have been translated into Awara, and audio Scripture is available through digital platforms — but access to the full written Scriptures in their own language remains limited. The completion of a full New Testament or Bible in Awara would be a lasting gift to this people, giving every generation direct access to the whole counsel of God.
Strong, biblically grounded pastors and church leaders are essential to the ongoing health of the Awara church. Communities that have lived with Christianity for generations can be vulnerable to a faith that becomes formal and habitual rather than living and transforming. The Awara need shepherds who know the Scriptures deeply, who pray with persistence, and who love their congregations enough to call them toward genuine discipleship rather than mere religious observance.
Families also need support in passing faith on to their children. As younger generations encounter wider Papua New Guinea society through education and employment in towns, they need a faith rooted deeply enough to hold through those transitions.
Pray for the completion of Bible translation in the Awara language, and that the full scriptures would be placed into the hands and homes of every family in the community.
Pray that the Awara church would move from cultural Christianity to a living, transforming faith — that men, women, and young people would know Jesus Christ personally and follow him wholeheartedly.
Pray for faithful, biblically-centered pastors and church leaders among the Awara — people who shepherd their communities with both courage and love, and who build their ministry on the foundation of Scripture.
Pray for Awara families, that parents would pass genuine faith to their children, and that the next generation would not drift from the Lord as they encounter the wider world.
Pray that the small portion of the community still practicing ethnic religion would encounter the living God and find in Jesus Christ the forgiveness and new life that no other spiritual system can offer.
Pray for any Bible translators, mission workers, and church planters laboring in and around the Finisterre Range, that their work would be sustained and bear lasting fruit.
Scripture Prayers for the Awara in Papua New Guinea.
| Profile Source: Joshua Project |


