The Are Mukawa are a coastal Papuan people living at the tip of Cape Vogel, along the northern shore of Milne Bay Province in Papua New Guinea. Their homeland occupies the northeastern point of the PNG mainland, where the Solomon Sea stretches out before them and the rugged mountains of Cape Vogel rise behind their villages. The Are Mukawa are part of the broader Massim cultural world — a region encompassing Milne Bay Province and its many island communities, known for matrilineal social organization, seafaring heritage, and inter-island exchange networks.
The Are Mukawa speak Are, also known as Mukawa, a language belonging to the Western Oceanic branch of the Austronesian language family. The language has a written form and holds a remarkable place in the history of Papua New Guinea. Anglican missionaries of the London Missionary Society landed at Dogura on the Cape Vogel coast in 1891, and within just a few years the village of Mukawa had become a center of early Christian literary activity. By 1904 Bible portions had been translated into a creolized form of the Mukawa language, the New Testament followed in 1921, and a complete Bible in Are was published in 1925 — one of the earliest complete Bible translations produced for any language community in all of Papua New Guinea. This extraordinary legacy of early scripture translation reflects the deep and long-standing relationship between the Are Mukawa and the word of God.
The Are Mukawa live in villages along the Cape Vogel coastline and depend on a combination of fishing, subsistence gardening, and the gathering of local foods to meet their daily needs. The sea is central to life here, providing fish and other marine resources to coastal families. Gardens produce taro, yams, sweet potatoes, bananas, and other crops suited to the tropical coastal environment, and coconuts are both a food source and a trade product. Copra — dried coconut flesh — has long been an important small-scale cash crop in Milne Bay Province.
As part of the Massim world, the Are Mukawa share a cultural landscape characterized by matrilineal descent, in which identity, land rights, and clan membership are traced through the mother's line. Canoe craftsmanship carries deep significance in this coastal setting, with elaborately made canoes serving as both practical vessels and markers of skill, identity, and community prestige. The broader Milne Bay region celebrates its seafaring heritage through the annual Kenu and Kundu Festival held at Alotau, where communities gather for canoe races, traditional dances, kundu drumming, and cultural displays. Clan relationships and extended family networks shape social obligations, and community events — including marriages, harvest celebrations, and church gatherings — mark the rhythm of village life.
Christianity is the primary religion of the Are Mukawa, and they are classified as significantly reached with a meaningful evangelical presence. The gospel has been part of Cape Vogel life for well over a century, and the Anglican Church established deep roots in this community beginning with the Dogura mission landing in 1891. The Are Mukawa have the rare distinction of having a complete Bible in their own language, published nearly a century ago and available today in both print and digital formats. The Jesus Film is also available in the Are language, along with audio scripture resources, giving the community multiple avenues for engaging with God's Word.
A small portion of the community continues to hold traditional ethnic religious beliefs. In the broader Massim region, traditional worldviews have historically involved understandings of spiritual forces connected to the ancestors, the land, and the sea. Where such beliefs persist among the Are Mukawa, the answer is not found in those traditions but in the one who made the sea and everything in it — Jesus Christ, the Lord of all creation, in whom alone true forgiveness and everlasting life are offered.
Despite a century of gospel witness and a complete Bible in their language, the Are Mukawa need the same thing every Christian community needs: faithful, Scripture-grounded local leaders who will call their people to genuine, maturing faith rather than nominal religious belonging. Where older traditional beliefs have not been fully displaced by the truth of the gospel, the church needs the boldness and the biblical grounding to speak with clarity and love about the sufficiency of Christ. Discipleship that moves beyond cultural Christianity and into living, transforming faith remains the ongoing spiritual need of this community.
Physically, the Are Mukawa face the challenges common to many coastal communities in Milne Bay Province. Access to reliable healthcare is limited, as the province's health infrastructure is stretched thin across a vast area of coastline and islands. Malaria remains a concern in the tropical lowland environment. Quality education for children in remote Cape Vogel communities requires ongoing support, as many villages lack well-resourced and consistently staffed schools. These practical needs present a real opportunity for the Are Mukawa church — which carries one of the longest legacies of the gospel in Papua New Guinea — to serve its neighbors and demonstrate the compassion of Christ in tangible ways.
Pray for Are Mukawa church leaders to be faithful, biblically trained, and bold in calling their communities away from any remaining traditional beliefs and toward wholehearted, living faith in Jesus Christ alone.
Pray for improved access to healthcare and quality education across Cape Vogel's villages, and that the local church would be a source of practical compassion and hope for families in need.
Pray for Are Mukawa families — that parents would instill genuine faith in their children, and that the next generation would grow up not merely knowing the Bible exists in their language but knowing and loving the God of that Bible.
Pray that the Are Mukawa, heirs of one of Papua New Guinea's oldest gospel legacies and possessors of a complete Bible in their own tongue, would be stirred to share their faith boldly with less-reached communities throughout Milne Bay Province and beyond.
Scripture Prayers for the Mukawa, Are in Papua New Guinea.
| Profile Source: Joshua Project |


