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Quiz – Dialogue, peace and olive territories

How much do you know about olives, peace and sustainability?
We created a quiz for schools, families and curious minds: simple questions that connect the history of the olive tree, climate change, and the messages of peace from our Gardens.

Path: Quiz 1 of 10

Quiz 1 – Do you know the olive tree and peace?

Choose “True” or “False”: the card will flip and you won’t be able to go back.

Q1

The olive tree can grow in arid territories, becoming an ally against desertification.

In many arid regions, the olive tree stabilizes the soil, protects biodiversity, and supports local communities.

Q2

A Garden of Peace is only a symbolic olive grove, with no educational activities.

Each Garden of Peace hosts educational activities, projects with schools, and dialogue pathways with communities.

Q3

A variety like Arbequina can represent multiple continents in The Garden of Peace projects.

Arbequina is present in Europe, America, Asia and Oceania as a symbol of adaptation and migration.

Q4

The olive tree is recognized as a symbol of peace in many cultures around the world.

From Mediterranean traditions to Eastern cultures, the olive tree speaks of truce, reconciliation and alliance among peoples.

Q5

Olive biodiversity concerns only the number of varieties present in a territory.

Biodiversity includes landscapes, cultivation systems, local knowledge and social ecosystems.

Result

You scored: 0/5

Quiz 2 – Territories and sustainability

Choose “True” or “False”: the card will flip and you won’t be able to go back.

Q6

Arbequina is a variety adopted across multiple continents and shows the olive tree’s global journey.

It is present in Europe, America, Asia and Oceania, a symbol of adaptation and migration.

Q7

Gardens of Peace do not require phytosanitary certificates for the plants that are sent.

Each plant is accompanied by a phytosanitary certificate and a varietal identity certificate.

Q8

The Territories of Peace and Sustainability tell ecosystems, not political borders.

The project describes mountains, islands, deserts, plateaus and coasts: not States.

Q9

Biodiversity is limited to botanical variety, with no links to cultures and landscapes.

Biodiversity is also cultural, agronomic, ecological and social: it involves practices, landscapes and communities.

Q10

The plants used in the TGoP model come from certified international collections.

They come from World Olive Germplasm Banks and other recognized collections, with guaranteed traceability.

Result

You scored: 0/10

Quiz 3 – Dialogue, memory and community

Choose “True” or “False”: the card will flip and you won’t be able to go back.

Q11

Every Garden of Peace is an educational space open to the community.

It hosts schools, cultural events and intergenerational dialogue pathways.

Q12

The 21-variety model represents only native European varieties.

The project embraces territories linked to Africa, Asia, America, Oceania and Europe: a global mosaic of ecosystems and cultures.

Q13

The language of the olive tree brings together migration, sustainability and adaptation.

The olive tree is a symbol of resilience, harmony and coexistence among territories and cultures.

Q14

The plants in the Gardens are chosen without scientific criteria.

Selections follow certified agronomic, ecological and cultural criteria.

Q15

Peace in territories arises from coexistence among nature, community and memory.

Gardens of Peace connect young people, traditions and shared landscapes.

Result

You scored: 0/15

Quiz 4 – Designing a Garden of Peace

Test what you know about the 21-variety model and the responsible use of the Garden.

Q16

The 21-variety model links each olive tree primarily to a State and its official flag.

Each variety is connected to a territory-ecosystem (mountains, deserts, coasts, islands), not a political border.

Q17

The plants in the Gardens of Peace come from World Germplasm Banks and certified collections.

Scientific origin guarantees correct varietal identity, agronomic quality and phytosanitary traceability.

Q18

Each tree is accompanied by an essential legend and a QR code linking to the official profile on the TGoP website.

In this way, the garden becomes a living map usable by schools, researchers and cultural operators.

Q19

The Garden of Peace can be used for political or religious events if the local community considers them important.

The agreement with TGoP excludes political or religious events and provides for revocation of recognition in case of violations.

Q20

Caring for the Garden involves young and old to keep together territorial memory and a shared future.

Young people plant the future, elders safeguard the memory of the olive tree and the landscape: the garden is an intergenerational space.

Result

You scored: 0/20

Quiz 5 – Ethics, limits and responsible use

Test what you know about the rules, limits and proper use of the Garden of Peace.

Q21

The Garden of Peace can be freely used for any type of event, without constraints.

Use of the garden is governed by a formal agreement with TGoP and must respect values, human rights and environmental protection.

Q22

The agreement with The Garden of Peace serves to preserve the integrity of the project and the garden landscape.

The agreement defines limits, modes of use and responsibilities, preventing improper uses of the Garden of Peace.

Q23

It is possible to freely change the plant layout or remove official signage without authorization.

Unauthorized changes to plants, garden structure or official TGoP signage are not allowed.

Q24

Failure to comply with the guidelines can lead to revocation of the Garden of Peace’s official recognition.

In case of serious violations, the garden may leave the official network of Gardens of Peace.

Q25

Environmental protection is not among the criteria considered in the use of the Garden of Peace.

Environmental protection is central: the Garden of Peace brings together landscape, community and ecological responsibility.

Result

You scored: 0/25

Quiz 6 – Local communities, young people and the future

A Garden of Peace truly lives only if communities and young people take care of it.

Q26

Local communities are the true long-term guardians of the Garden of Peace.

The garden is strong if it is rooted in the communities that live it and care for it every day.

Q27

The TGoP project favors only big cities and pays no attention to small local realities.

The project also gives special attention to small communities, often bearers of precious landscapes and traditions.

Q28

In Gardens of Peace there are no multifunctional spaces for cultural activities, concerts or workshops.

TGoP encourages the creation of multifunctional spaces open to citizens, always in accordance with the guidelines.

Q29

In the Territories of Peace and Sustainability, attention is on natural and cultural landscapes, not political borders.

Mountains, deserts, coasts and plains become part of a global story where peace takes root in the land.

Q30

In creating a garden, young people plant the future and elders safeguard the memory of the olive tree and the territory.

Intergenerational collaboration is central: a shared future grows from memory.

Result

You scored: 0/30

Quiz 7 – Landscapes, ecosystems and a living map

The 21 varieties tell living ecosystems: mountains, deserts, coasts, islands, cities and countryside.

Q31

In the 21-variety model, each tree represents a living ecosystem more than a single State border.

The focus is on landscapes and territories: mountains, deserts, coasts, plains, islands, rural and urban landscapes.

Q32

In TGoP profiles, the continent and diffusion territories are not indicated, to avoid complicating reading.

Each profile reports continent and diffusion territories to show how life adapts to different conditions.

Q33

The physical map the Garden offers visitors helps them understand how life adapts to different conditions while keeping identity.

The garden is a “living map” where one can read adaptation, migration and rooting of olive varieties.

Q34

The territories considered by the project concern only rural landscapes, without including urban contexts.

The project combines rural and urban landscapes, because cities too are places of memory and future.

Q35

Gardens of Peace are designed also as tools for schools and researchers, not only as ornamental spaces.

QR codes, legends and scientific traceability make the garden an educational and research platform.

Result

You scored: 0/35

Quiz 8 – Nature, art and education

In the Garden of Peace, nature, art and education intertwine to create a living space.

Q36

A Garden of Peace can host workshops, educational pathways and artistic events consistent with the spirit of the project.

The garden is a space of beauty and relationship, open to educational and cultural experiences consistent with TGoP.

Q37

In the Garden it is not possible to organize educational activities, because the goal is purely contemplative.

Gardens of Peace are designed precisely to welcome educational activities and active learning pathways.

Q38

The garden experience is lived only by reading botanical profiles, without involving relationships among people.

Relationships, dialogue and encounters are an integral part of the meaning of the Garden of Peace.

Q39

Nature, art and education can intertwine in the Garden to create a living place of peace, perceptible also in the landscape.

Installations, workshops and events under the olive trees make peace a concrete and shared experience.

Q40

If an event generates conflict or messages contrary to human rights, it can still be hosted in the Garden if it is successful with the public.

Consistency with the values of peace and human rights is an indispensable condition for any activity hosted in the garden.

Result

You scored: 0/40

Quiz 9 – Rules, agreements and responsibility

The agreement with TGoP protects the Garden, communities and the landscape.

Q41

The use of the Garden of Peace is governed by a formal agreement with TGoP to guarantee coherence and protection.

The agreement defines limits, responsibilities and conditions to maintain official recognition.

Q42

Removing a QR code or an official legend has no relevance for the Garden’s recognition.

Signage and QR codes are an integral part of the project: removing them without authorization is a violation of the guidelines.

Q43

Any violations of the guidelines may lead to review or revocation of the Garden’s international recognition.

The network of Gardens of Peace is founded on coherence with shared values and rules.

Q44

TGoP guidelines completely ignore the issue of social responsibility toward local communities.

Responsibility toward communities is central: the garden is created for them and with them.

Q45

A responsible use of the garden requires considering landscape, people and the project’s values at the same time.

The Garden of Peace is an intertwining of nature, relationships and shared ethical principles.

Result

You scored: 0/45

Quiz 10 – Summary: Territories of Peace and Sustainability

Final level: bring together ecosystems, communities, memory and a shared future.

Q46

In the Territories of Peace and Sustainability, the focus is on natural and cultural landscapes more than political borders.

The project uses the olive tree to tell territories, not flags: mountains, deserts, coasts, plains, islands, cities.

Q47

The 21-variety model turns each Garden of Peace into a living laboratory of ecosystems, communities and a shared future.

The varieties are the “vocabulary” through which the garden speaks about peace, adaptation and sustainability.

Q48

The involvement of young people and local communities is considered marginal compared to the olive variety layout.

Without communities and young people the garden remains incomplete: they give it voice and continuity over time.

Q49

Territorial memory is important only in the initial design phase, then it no longer influences the Garden.

Memory enters every activity: ceremonies, stories, guided visits, involvement of older generations.

Q50

A well-cared-for Garden of Peace allows visitors to read together nature, local history and commitment to the future.

It is a place where peace is seen in the landscape, heard in stories and built through concrete actions.

Final result

You scored: 0/50