The Drukpa nuns are community activists, promoting gender equality,
environmental sustainability, and intercultural tolerance in their home villages in the Himalayas, where women's access to educational and economic opportunities are some of the lowest in the world. Prompted by the Gyalwang Drukpa's belief that community service is a key part of religious faith and practice, the nuns have played an active role in regional relief efforts, promoting awareness about human trafficking, and working to preach and practice environmentally sustainable lifestyles. They also operate health care clinics – offering free eye care camps to villagers – and rescue stray and wounded animals throughout the region. After the 2015
Gorkha Earthquake, the nuns trekked from
Amitabha Monastery in
Kathmandu to nearby villages to remove rubble, salvage villagers' possessions, and clear pathways. They also delivered food and medical aid to affected villagers. Many of these villages were inaccessible to traditional relief organizations and government aid. According to the humanitarian nonprofit Live to Love International, with which the nuns collaborate on relief and conservation projects, the nuns delivered 3000 tons of rice and 500 tons of milk to affected villagers and built 10,000 temporary shelters across the region. The Kung Fu Nuns have assisted
Waterkeeper Alliance in its work to ensure access to clean fresh water in the Himalayas. Over 200 nuns serve as volunteer water quality monitors, part of a larger network of Waterkeeper organizations and affiliates that seek to spread awareness about the importance of the Himalayan Glacier and its rivers. Waterkeeper Alliance trains individuals and groups to collect and communicate these water quality metrics that are then used by the organization to press for watershed protection. The sisters form a significant part of the spiritual entourage of the Gyalwang Drukpa, who leads annual "Eco Pad Yatras" – holy pilgrimages that also allow the nuns and other walkers to clean up toxic waste and dangerous plastic litter that is polluting fresh water in the Himalayan villages. The nuns visit villages on other occasions to speak about the importance of recycling and reducing dependence on plastic. In 2017, the Kung Fu Nuns hosted their first-ever self-defense training, which they organized for Himalayan women after an increase in
sex attacks in India. According to the Indian
National Crime Records Bureau, more than 34,000 rapes were reported in India in 2015, a 43% increase since 2011. Seeing an opportunity to assist women in India who felt increasingly threatened in public, the nuns hosted nearly 100 women from their early teens to young adulthood to teach them effective self-defense skills at
Hemis Monastery in Ladakh. The nuns hosted the second self-defence workshop with Live to Love India in July 2018. == Bicycle yatras for human trafficking prevention ==