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Author Topic: Christianity in Pakistan  (Read 516 times)

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Offline poche

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Christianity in Pakistan
« on: September 28, 2018, 03:13:31 AM »
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  • “This is what happened to my mother: as a student, she was kidnapped by Muslims who forced her to accept Islam and compelled her marry my father. It is a very common practice in my province to forcefully convert Hindu and Christian girls to Islam. My mother admitted my father as her husband and started living a normal life with him. They had four children—there are two younger brothers and a sister. I am the eldest.
    Kainat (far right) with fellow students at university
    “However, my mother secretly went to church and I often went with her. She read the Bible in the home; it was clear that she didn’t embrace Islam; in her heart she was still a Christian. I also started reading the Bible and going to church regularly with my mother.  Once I was in church and people were standing in line for taking Holy Communion; I joined the line, but someone told me I was not allowed to take Communion because I was not a Christian. That incident made me cry.
    I told my mother that I wanted to get Holy Communion—that the Lord Jesus Christ was also my savior. But somehow my father came to know about this and he forbade us to go to to church; for a year we did not go. Then my father died. My grandparents forced my mother to marry a cousin of my father’s, which is also common practice, as Muslims say women need the protection of men. My mom resisted, but there was no way out and she married him. I was 14 at the time.
    “This man was also very strict, but I started reading the Bible on daily basis in at home; though my stepfather often tried to stop me, my mother supported me. When I had finished reading the whole Bible, I told my mother that I wanted to become Christian. My mother was very worried that my grandparents or other relatives might kill us.
    “Still, I went to church with my mother and asked a priest to baptize me; but he was not sure: ‘this is very risky; sorry, I am not in a position to baptize you.,’ he said; the priest was afraid that my relatives and other Muslim fanatics would kill us if they found out he baptized me; and he did not want to create a problem for his parishioners either. I told him: ‘Father, I am ready to die for Christ …
    “Then came a summer vacation and we went to another province to visit my aunt, my mother’s sister; we went to church with her and, again, I met with a priest and told him of my wish to embrace Christianity. He was very nice and gave me some books for study. We spent three months at my aunt’s house, going to church every day. And, one Sunday, after Mass, the priest asked me: ‘child, are you ready for baptism?’ I was very happy and said yes. Finally, in 2013, my two brothers, my sister and I all received the Sacrament of Baptism. It was easier in that church as we were far from home.
    “When we returned to our hometown, my stepfather somehow found out that we had converted and he offered my mom a divorce, which she accepted with an eager heart. My mother got a job and rented an apartment; everything was going fine, we attended church and my spiritual director contacted the priest who had baptized me so I was cleared to receive Holy Communion; everything was perfect!
    “Then, one evening in 2016, my ex-stepfather and his relatives stormed into our home; he told my mother they came to take me, that they wouldn’t let me marry a Christian boy, and instead they wanted me to marry a 54-year-old Muslim man—I was just 18. My mother put up a fight, called our priest  and the police; when police came they left us.
    “I told my spiritual director about the incident; he then put me up in a hostel run by sisters, where I prepared for my entrance exams for medical school. I want to become a doctor and serve humanity.”
    “Yet, our problems aren’t over yet. In October of 2017, my Muslim relatives shot one of my brothers; the bullet wounded his lungs and ribs and he is still in the hospital, struggling for life. My family is facing threats to our lives and I don’t know what is going to happen with us in future—but our hope is in our Lord Jesus Christ.

    https://www.churchinneed.org/in-pakistan-a-muslim-convert-confronts-great-risks-in-becoming-a-christian/

    Are you ready to die for Christ?


    Offline Vintagewife3

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    Re: Christianity in Pakistan
    « Reply #1 on: September 28, 2018, 08:18:58 AM »
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  • That’s was a needed read this morning! Thank you! 



    Offline poche

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    Re: Christianity in Pakistan
    « Reply #2 on: October 04, 2018, 12:24:07 AM »
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  • Reports emerging from Pakistan have prompted fears that a Christian mother-of-five held in prison there for more than nine years may have dementia.
    Asia Bibi is displaying symptoms of dementia at an "early" stage, according to a campaign group trying to free her - the British Pakistan Christian Association (BPCA).
    The Association cited a recent visit to Bibi by a Pakistani journalist who suggested her memory, mental sharpness and judgement were in decline.
    Bibi was found guilty under Pakistan's strict blasphemy laws in November 2010 after being accused of insulting the Islamic prophet Mohammad and drinking from the same water source as Muslims in June 2009.
    For most of the past nine years, Bibi has been held in solitary confinement inside a Pakistan prison cell - sentenced to death, despite support from high-profile figures including the Pope.
    Concerned solitary confinement has had a serious toll on Bibi's welfare, Wilson Chowdhry from the BPCA said: "No divine being needs human help which makes blasphemy laws so petty and ridiculous.
    "Yet, the intolerant nature of Muslims in Pakistan has meant an innocent mother-of-five has lost a relationship with her family and through the onset of dementia, she may never be able to bond effectively with them again.
    "If delays in her Supreme Court appeal take any longer, then the freedom we have all hoped to gain for her will be extremely shallow and will quickly become a new period of isolation."
    A description given by a Pakistani journalist of Bibi's condition was examined by an assistant nurse with links to the BPCA who said she considered Bibi's symptoms to be dementia-related.
    The report suggests an account the BPCA received 18 months ago from a cleaner at Bibi's prison who described similar behaviour. It is relatively unusual for anyone under 65-years-old to develop dementia.
    According to the BPCA, it has so far remained impossible for Bibi to undergo a test for dementia while she is behind bars.

    https://www.premier.org.uk/News/World/Dementia-fears-for-Christian-mum-Asia-Bibi-held-in-Pakistan