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Pakistan's Minorities Citizens

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I wanna visit Nankana Sahib one day.Do they allow people now ? Last year a friend on FB told me that he was not allowed to enter in Gurudwara due to security reasons.
 
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Beautiful Church - Rawalpindi





St.Mary Magdalene Church is located Abid Majeed Road Lahore. This Church is the largest worship church in Lahore. For over 155 Years, St.Mary Magdalene Church has been enriching the spiritual lives of countless people.

The old name of Church was Mian Mir Cantonment Church. This magnificent and massive structured building was built in the time period of six years i.e from 1850 to 1856.




church at Thandiani
 
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Documentary: Hindu Mandir (Temple) in Karachi - Pakistan (4K video)




Documentary on 200-300 BC Mandir of Katas Raj 11 Feb 2012 near Kalar Kahar Salt Range Pakistan

 
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PESHAWAR: Sahib Singh has a bowl in his hand which is filled with lassi [yoghurt drink] and serving it along with other food items to deserving people — mostly to people attending to their patients — before Iftar. He has been doing this since 2001 in front of his medicine store near the Lady Reading Hospital Peshawar.
People start surrounding Singh as Iftar time approaches to get their food from a person who even does not belong to their religion showing that humanity exists irrespective of one’s religious belief.

Singh has been living in Peshawar for the last several decades. He says his religion teaches him to serve the deserving and needy people in the month of Ramazan — which is a holy month — and “God gives back much better in return for helping the needy in Ramazan”.

Singh says he doesn’t ask for any donations nor begs for money, but arranges money from the income he earns from the sale of medicines at his store.

“By the grace of God, my medicine store is capable of bearing the expenses of helping the deserving people in the scorching summer heat when everyone observing fast needs lassi and sharbat.”


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Sikh Community of Pakistan offering Iftar to the commuters.

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Members of Pakistan Hindu Youth Forum hosting an Iftari meal for fellow citizens.

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Raj Kumar, first Pakistani to win US award


HYDERABAD: Raj Kumar Gujar, an Islamabad-based young man, who hails from Sindh’s Umerkot district, has recently won the prestigious ‘Emerging young leader award’ in Washington. The second edition of the award was conferred by the US State Department on 10 young leaders from various countries.

Gujar became the first Pakistani to have been bestowed with this recognition. He now plans to return to his home province to start working for peace, harmony and education.

Talking to The Express Tribune, the business management graduate of Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology’s Islamabad campus elaborated his future plans.

“Continuing my efforts for peace, education, women empowerment and against extremism and intolerance, I have conceived a plan to organise a cross-border literature festival and a road-show of Mai Dhai [a folk singer from Tharparkar who catapulted to prominence after her maiden song released by the Coke Studio].”

He aims to undertake this daunting and, perhaps, incendiary assignment of bringing Pakistani, Indian and Afghan writers together at a festival in Islamabad.

“Pakistan ought to nurture peaceful relations with its neighbours. And the youth [of these countries] can be pivotal to promoting peace,” he believes.

Gujar attended the 10th Global Peace Youth Festival, hosted by India in 2015. He represented Pakistan in that event. “I know some fine authors in India and Afghanistan and I hope two to three literary figures from each of these countries will attend the festival.”

However, to materialise his objective, he is trying to secure sponsorship from the US as he is also general secretary of the Pakistan-US Alumni Network (PUAN). “Organising the festival totally depends on funding.”

After his meeting with US Ambassador David Hale on Tuesday, Gujar says he has high hopes for the funding.

Another of his project features musical performance of folk singer Mai Dhai, who sings in Dhatki language. According to Kumar, he will organise her shows in 12 cities of Pakistan where PUAN chapters exist.

The young activist, who spent five years in Islamabad to complete his fully-funded university education on scholarship, appears worried about what he describes as growing signs of religious intolerance at his birthplace.

“Umerkot and Tharparkar used to be an epitome of religious harmony. But, now during the past five years I have seen changes in the attitude [of the people].” For him the centuries-old peace seems to be losing ground to extremism and intolerance.

“What happened to Irfan Maseeh [a sanitary worker who died in Umerkot allegedly because doctors refused to treat him in the hospital] is really alarming.”

Gujar says he will start his efforts for restoring harmony in his hometown by arranging a peace-builders conference as a first step.

Some of his previous US-funded projects include promoting peace through music, sports, art and dialogue, and empowering women through knowledge and organisation.
 
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HERITAGE: GOD IN THE MOUNTAINS


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St Luke’s Church in Abbotabad


As one reaches the nearly 9,000-ft mountaintop called Thandiani, near Abbottabad, there comes in view a little stone and wood building in need of urgent repair. A small wooden plate erected in the grass not far from its gates identifies it as Saint Xavier Church, Diocese of Peshawar, Church of Pakistan.

St Xavier’s Church was built somewhere towards the end of the 19th or early 20th century by the British civil and military officers during their stay in what was then called the British or Indian Northwest Frontier. In keeping with their missionary zeal, a small two-room dispensary was built some 100 yards to the right of this Anglican place of worship. The clinic still gets a visiting doctor on some weekends from the Bach Christian Hospital at Qalandarabad, midway between Abbottabad and Mansehra.

The church at Thandiani is a picture of neglect. Locals selling tea, food and groceries in the few shops clustered around the church do not remember when a service of any nature was last held inside its penurious hall. As one peeps through its broken glass windows, a time-worn rug can be seen spread on the potholed floor. Its wooden pews look rickety. It does not even have a lectern. Underneath its tin-covered sloping roof, there is little on the bland walls except a curtain with some words of universal wisdom on it. And yet some tourists seem to have made blatant attempts at knocking one of its windows off its hinges out of mere curiosity, leaving the job half finished out of frustration.

There are a number of awe-inspiring churches hidden away in the mountains upcountry

For some years, two elderly nuns also acting as compounders, resided in the dispensary during their summer sojourns on the mountaintop, but not anymore. One of them is reported to have died while the other is said to have departed for her country of origin. These days its broken windowpanes tell a tale of poor living conditions and an acute lack of sanitation.

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The Holy Trinity Church in Murree


The serene hill station of Thandiani has transformed during the last three decades into a dirty little bazaar, thronged mostly by domestic tourists from Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. These tourists, finding little of what they revel in at the Mall in Murree, find the place quite below their expectations. Water on the mountaintop is scarce if not altogether nonexistent, which together with the unavailability of proper hotels, drives most visitors away. They loiter on this narrow mountain strip for an hour or two and after feasting on pakoras fried on kerosene stoves, depart for the more happening places in the region.

The highest altitude point in the Himalayas, Thandiani is not a place for revellers. Unaccustomed to the heat of the plains, the British civil and military administrators serving in this part of India developed Thandiani as a summer retreat for themselves and their families. Before the present road was built, British officers would transport their families to the mountaintop in palanquins. The tall conifers found in such abundance on the mountaintops in the Himalayas including Thandiani, Nathiagali, Dungagali, Ayubia and Murree were all planted during the times of the British. These trees constitute our most prized heritage.

All these quaint churches would have attracted foreign tourists only if our tourism policies had been a little more imaginative in preserving and creating them as tourist attractions.

Similarly, until quite recently most of the land on the mountaintops, in what was earlier known as the Frontier, was in the ownership of the Diocese of Peshawar. Perhaps the same was true in the case of Murree which has the highest number of churches built along the perimeters of the Mall. By the look of things, it appears that in future the Diocese of Peshawar would be left in charge of only about half a dozen churches at Thandiani, Nathiagali, Dungagali and Ayubia as private landowners have seized a major chunk of the prized land.

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interior view of The Holy Trinity Church, Murree


The church at Nathiagali is by all estimates the most photographed place of worship in the mountains. With its wooden structure, perennially painted in black with its towering spire, it offers a panoramic view and numerous photo-points to the tourists looking for recreation near it. There is a small rectory behind the main hall that presently serves as a lodging unit for its forlorn-looking watchman. The good-natured watchman normally lets the tourists enter the church. Most of these churches and particularly those at Dungagali, Ayubia and Murree were built in the Gothic style of architecture.

Some four kilometres to the east of Nathiagali, the wood and stone church at Dungagali stands next to the Mukshpuri Hotel. The main building of the hotel built in 1880 was reduced to ashes in a blaze some four months ago. The proximity of the church to the hotel is of significance since the hotel with its famed dancing hall served as the central point of congregation for the English officers in the old days. The church narrowly survived the high rising flames of the blaze which was put down after great effort but not before it had devoured an invaluable piece of heritage.

Relatively hidden from public view, the church at Ayubia is nestled among one of the most beautiful spots. The location is nevertheless quite well-known to the domestic tourists of the Christian faith who use its expansive lawns for picnics -- and leave it littered afterwards. With its purpose-built rectory, a couple of lodging units, an old-fashioned staircase made from iron that takes one up to an attic, and even an old piano, the grand old church at Ayubia must have served as a complete administrative set-up during its heyday.

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St Mathew’s Church in Nathiagali


It takes little imagination to transport oneself to past when the echo of psalms and hymns recited in Latin would rise from the grand stone building of the church in Ayubia. Ironically, the present generation of Christians use the precincts of the church more as an advantageous place for tourism and picnicking.

All these quaint churches would have attracted foreign tourists only if our tourism policies had been a little more imaginative in preserving and creating them as tourist attractions. Till such imagination creeps into our effete system of bureaucracy, one can only hope that efforts would be made to conserve our irreplaceable heritage from further dilapidation.
 
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Pakistan's Hindu Community Celebrating Raksha Bandhan



Hindu women arrange flowers during celebrations of Raksha Bandhan festival at Laxmi Narayan Temple in Karachi.

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A Hindu woman performs a religious ritual with her brother at Laxmi Narayan Temple during celebrations of Raksha Bandhan festival.

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Hindu woman performs a religious ritual at Laxmi Narayan Temple during celebrations of Raksha Bandhan festival.

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