In this issue, Katie shares about a complicated and somewhat hilarious process for getting her Peruvian driver's license, I reflect on how special the work is with Living Libraries has been in special thanks to all who contributed, and give just a quick snapshot of our semester with 35 students. Finally, we give Sarah a closing word as she transitions back to living in the US. We thank you so much for your ongoing prayers for us and for what is happening in Arequipa!
I Feel So Loved
Holding a Book for the First Time
Often I use this space to share big numbers about how many schools, teachers, and students we’re sharing the gift of reading with. I’m proud of the program and how big an impact our team is making in real lives of real teachers that plays out in the lives and futures of so many kids. The school year started in March, so we’re 9-weeks into a new school year and the team is hard at work with 52 teachers, in 6 schools, working with 1500 students. We set up 38 mini-libraries this year—many thanks to many of you!
Harding University Latin America 2025
It takes about 18 months of work to pull off a semester of Harding University Latin America. And it’s over in an instant. What happens over the course of three months, though, is real. The walks. Hours around the table. The conversations. The encounter with difference that teaches us something fundamental about what it means to be human.
Closing Words from Sarah Hale
Here we are a year and eight-ish months later. I am officially back in the US, but before I departed from Arequipa, I wrote these final words to my church community. After apprenticing under the Daggetts and working in communal missions, this little speech sums up the radical effect my time in Peru had on my life and what it taught me about following Jesus and loving others.
A Few More Pictures for the Historical Record
We’re the Daggetts: Katie, Jeremy, Adileen (almost 9! Just finished 3rd grade!) and Kinney (Almost 6! Just finished kindergarten) and we’ve lived and worked in Arequipa, Peru for the last ten years. This is the Team Arequipa Newsletter, a publication that’s been running consistently for more than 15 years and for which you, at some point, signed up to receive in your electronic mailbox. Overloaded? Unsubscribe. Here to stay? Welcome!
Closing Words from Caily
Caily Moore lived and worked with us in Arequipa for the last 2+ years as part of a missions apprenticeship. You can read her complete letter here, but I wanted to share a snapshot of what she learned at the close of this edition of the Team Arequipa newsletter.
Still Life: Full Circle
One of the coolest products of teaching Humanities in the Asia-Pacific this fall was this collaboration with my friend Michael Wright and his incredible weekly letter, Still Life. I assigned one of his letters about exploring diversity locally to the class, and then Michael and I worked together to share what that experience looked like for my students. Here’s what I wrote.
The Daggetts: 10 years in Peru and upcoming time in the U.S.
This October marked 10 years for us in Peru, a number that sort of astounds us, especially since that was the top part of our 5-10 year commitment when we moved to Peru in 2014. We don’t have any plans to move anytime soon, and continue to pray and discern what life and mission and family and work look like on an ongoing basis. Thank you for keeping us in your prayers.









