Forget “Kung Fu Panda” — meet the ninja nuns.

Nuns of the Buddhist Drukpa Order outside of Kathmandu wake up before dawn each day to perfect their craft of Chinese martial arts.

“We wake up at 3 a.m.,” Jigme Yanching Kamu told CNN. “We meditate, we bicycle and we train for three hours.”

She added: “The Drukpa Order is not for lazy people. Kung fu trains us to focus our minds for meditation.”

In addition to kung fu practice with swords, sticks and flags, the women learn to break bricks with their hands.

The Himalayan heroes are also involved in teaching self-defense classes for women, work to re-educate locals about women’s rights and have biked 14,000 miles to protest the human trafficking of women and girls. The nuns also delivered supplies to hard-to-reach villages after an earthquake struck Kathmandu in 2015.

The women started learning kung fu in 2008 when His Holiness Gyalwang Drukpa, the spiritual leader of the Drukpa lineage, hired masters to teach the nuns to boost the nun’s confidence and self-esteem.

“We are the only nunnery in all of the Himalayas doing deadly martial arts,” one nun, Kamu, told CNN. “This is a lifelong vow that I made to the Drukpa Order, and I am very proud of my practice.”