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Pakistan's Minorities Citizens

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St Patrick's Cathedral in Karachi was erected in 1881 and is made using local stone. Credit: Zahra Jamshed



"The design was obviously inspired by the cathedrals of medieval England," she added. "Its tri-pointed arched windows follow the pattern of those in Ely Cathedral (Cambridgeshire) and the twin spires appear simplified versions of those in Lichfield Cathedral (Staffordshire)."

The parish priest Father Mario Rodrigues, whose family originally came from Goa, said that on Good Fridays, up to 8,000 people attend a service held outside in the church's large precinct.
The Irish may have left, but St Patrick's Day is still celebrated with gusto, he added.
"Some people dress in green," he said. "But no one drinks Guinness. We celebrate by flying kites and eating biryani."



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Interior of the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Karachi. Credit: Isambard Wilkinson

Consecrated in 1855, Holy Trinity was built as a garrison church. Its tower, once five-stories high, was likened to a giraffe by a 19th-century observer -- and disparaged as "a grotesque campanile" by Jan Morris.

"It used to serve as a lighthouse signaling to ships coming into harbor," said Josiah. "But the top floors vibrated in the wind, so in 1904 they knocked down two levels."
Set in gardens bordered with privet hedges and rose beds, the church is entered via an elegantly carved Romanesque arch. Inside, on the walls of its somber nave, memorials commemorate colonial-era soldiers and officials.




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Pakistani Christians gather after attending a Christmas mass outside the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Lahore.


Lahore's other great church, Sacred Heart Cathedral, faces similar
 
Christians celebrate Easter with religious zeal across Pakistan

Easter commemorates the day followers believe Jesus was resurrected in Jerusalem 2,000 years ago.


Christian community on Sunday celebrated Easter with fullest traditional religious zeal and fervour across the country. The religious festival commemorates the day followers believe Jesus was resurrected in Jerusalem 2,000 years ago.

Special services were hosted at different places where the Christian community attended special prayers for salvation, and for the progress and prosperity of Pakistan.

Punjab Minister for Human Rights and Minorities Affairs Khalil Tahir Sandhu felicitated Christians on Easter, saying the day has great importance for the community.

He said all religious minorities enjoy equal rights under the Constitution of Pakistan. The minister said there was a great need to follow the teachings of Jesus Christ to promote love, peace and sacrifice.

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Christian devotees holding candles while attending an Easter vigil mass at the Sacred Heart Church in Lahore. — AFP


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Christian devotees holding candles while attending an Easter vigil mass at the Sacred Heart Church in Lahore. — AFP


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Christian devotees holding candles while attending an Easter vigil mass at the Sacred Heart Church in Lahore. — AFP


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Christian attend Easter mass at the Christ Church in Karachi. ─AFP


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Christians attend Easter mass at the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Lahore. —AFP


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Christians attend Easter mass at the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Lahore. —AFP


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Christians attend Easter mass at the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Lahore. —AFP


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Christians hold candles while attending midnight Easter service at St. Patrick church in Karachi, on March 31, 2018. —AP
 
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The marhi of Swai Gir in Shahdadpur, a town in South Sindh with a Hindu population, represents heterodox traditions and practices still thriving in Pakistan

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hidden away in old lahore..

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Pakistan's Buddha, bombed partially in 2007, Now restored



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Pakistan’s town Mithi where Hindus celebrate Muharram | BBC NEWS PUNJABI

 
Pakistan non-muslim Shaheeds in defence of the nation

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Kartarpur Border Opening

Complete Design, layout and procedures............................


 
Gurdwara Bhuman Shah
Depalpur , Okara



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Bhoman Shah: Gurdwara of Bhumman Shah

Baba Bhumman Shah was a prominent sadhu of Udasi Sikhs born in 1687 and died in 1762. Udasi sect of Sikhs was quite popular in 19th century and had a large following in Punjab. Baba Bhumman Shah is still revered for his spiritual teachings among many Sikhs and Hindus.

There was not just a palace of a marvellous architecture, but also a big gurdwara complex. It is located at 30° 31' 48.53" N, 73° 39' 23.13" E. It is almost 150 kms from Lahore and 45 kms from Okara, 17 kms from Depalpur on Haveli Lakha road.




Eastern side of the haveli.



View from the gurdwara.




View from the roof of the gurdwara.



Another view of the haveli.



An entrance to the haveli.




A door inside the haveli.




Interior portions of the haveli.

Date of construction of this haveli, according to Mr Iqbal Qaiser on a website allaboutsikhs.com, was constructed in 1910. It was a pleasant surprise to see this gurdwara in such a good condition and not occupied. I was told that Sikhs still come to this gurdwara and a couple of years ago a large number of them came here to offer their prayers.





Main entrance of the gurdwara Baba Bhumman Shah.





View of the courtyard of gurdwara Bhumman Shah.




A beautiful building in the gurdwara Bhumman Shah.




Another view.




Interior of the main prayer hall.





View from the gallery of the prayer hall.


 
5 gurdwaras that could be made part of Kartarpur Corridor

Five Sikh shrines in Pakistani Punjab with historical links to Guru Nanak and the other gurus now lie forgotten.

Haroon Khalid

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It has been referred to as the most dangerous border in the world.

Heavily militarised on both sides, the India-Pakistan border is completely fenced, with high-powered floodlights. On the late flight from Lahore to Karachi, when the weather is clear, one can see these lights run deep into the night.

Every day, hundreds of visitors gather at the Wagah border for the flag-lowering ceremony, which sees Indian and Pakistan soldiers put on an elaborate and aggressive show, with pumping chests and flying boots.

Further north, on the Line of Control and the working boundary, both armies frequently engage in firing, with unarmed civilians caught in the middle.

Here, and also in other parts of the border, these villagers are looked at with suspicion amid a perennial fear of cross-border infiltration. Occasionally, an uninformed visitor mistakenly crosses the border and finds himself languishing in jail on the other side for years.

But sometimes, the same border can be a site of reconciliation, of peace.

Standing about four kilometres from the India-Pakistan border, the Gurdwara Kartarpur Sahib, in the past few days, has managed to do just that.

With the construction of the planned peace corridor, the gurdwara would become a remarkable anomaly in the otherwise hostile context of the India-Pakistan border.

The peace corridor will connect this shrine in Pakistan’s Punjab province that is said to be the final resting place of Guru Nanak to Dera Baba Nanak in the Indian state of Punjab.

While the peace corridor itself is a much-needed step, it should serve as the starting point for several other such initiatives.

There are at least five other gurdwaras in Punjab, Pakistan, all historically significant and associated with either Guru Nanak or the other Sikh gurus, situated right on the border that in the days to come could also be incorporated into the peace corridor discussions.

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Indian Sikhs may soon get easy passage to the Gurdwara Kartarpur Sahib in Narowal district.—Iqbal Qaiser


Commemorating Nanak, Bhai Mardana

About 25 km from Lahore is the historical village of Jahman, which came into existence in the 13th century, according to British land survey reports.

Just a little outside the village lies Gurdwara Rori Sahib, a lone structure atop a small mound. A sacred pool that was once constructed next to this shrine has become a dirty pool of water.

It is believed that Guru Nanak often came to Jahman, which was not far from his maternal village of Dera Chahal, with his Muslim companion Bhai Mardana. The two would often sit, singing songs, on the mound, where later the gurdwara was built to commemorate them.

The “Rori” in the shrine’s name comes from shards of pottery that were found in abundance on this archaeological mound.

I first visited the gurdwara in 2008, a few days after the Mumbai terror attacks. India-Pakistan relations were at their lowest then and there was a real fear that war might break out.

As I stood inside the gurdwara, observing the remains of the frescoes depicting the 10 Sikh gurus inside the dome of the shrine, I heard a couple of fighter jets in the sky.

We later found out these were Indian war planes that had entered Pakistani airspace for a short while. The border is only a few kilometres from here. Standing on the roof of the gurdwara, I could see the tops of buildings on the Indian side.

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Gurdwara Rori Sahib stands atop a mound where Guru Nanak and Bhai Mardana are believed to have sat and sung songs.—Photo by the author


A short distance from here, along the border, is Ghavindi, another historical village believed to have been frequented by Guru Nanak and Bhai Mardana on their journeys from Dera Chahal to Sultanpur Lodhi, where Guru Nanak first found employment.

Outside the village, the first Sikh guru is said to have found refuge under a grove of lahura (desert teak) trees. The gurdwara that came up at this site is a modest structure, with a single room and a small dome, hidden in the trees.

There are two platforms for sitting — the higher one representing Guru Nanak and the other, slightly lower, representing Bhai Mardana.

Straw and salt had been placed on the platforms, perhaps by villagers, to whom the shrine still held some sort of spiritual significance.

The most dangerous border in the world is just a kilometre from here.

Once splendid, now forgotten

South of Jahman and Ghavindi, in Kasur district, lie the remains of two historical gurdwaras associated with the third Sikh guru, Amar Das.

These are the only gurdwaras associated with Guru Amar Das in Pakistan.

The first of the abandoned gurdwaras is located in Tergay village, a few kilometres from the border. A long structure with a white dome, it stands on an empty ground.

It is believed that the guru was on his way to Kasur when he was welcomed by the people of this village, who requested him to stay with them.

Tying his horse to a tree, the guru is believed to have accompanied the villagers. The gurdwara was later built at the place where the guru reportedly tied his horse.

A short distance from this gurdwara, in the village of Qadiwind, are the remains of Gurdwara Bhai Bahlol, named after a devotee of Guru Amar Das who is said to have built a water tank here to commemorate the guru’s visit.

Travelling further north along the border, one will come across the historical village of Padhana, where the first settlers can be traced to the 11th century, according to the British land survey reports.

Here, right at the entrance of the village, lie the remains of what once was a splendid gurdwara. A spacious structure with a vast vacant ground around it, there was a giant lock at the entrance to the complex the day I visited the village.

This is one of several gurdwaras in Pakistani Punjab associated with the sixth Sikh guru, Guru Hargobind. The guru is believed to have arrived in Padhana, a prominent village, on the exhortation of its residents. Later, his devotees constructed a gurdwara in his name.

Barely a kilometre from the border, this shrine is now a pitiful sight compared to the freshly painted gurdwara that stands on the other side of the divide.

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The gurdwara of Guru Hargobind in Padhana village is one of several shrines dedicated to the sixth Sikh guru.

The fate of these gurdwaras would have been drastically different had Cyril Radcliffe, the architect of the India-Pakistan boundary, changed the lines on his page by a centimetre or two.

Instead of being part of a thriving pilgrimage, as they were meant to be, they are today a sad reminder of the division of history that Partition ensured.

With the Kartarpur Sahib Corridor, however, there is some hope that perhaps one day, these gurdwaras too can have similar corridors, allowing thousands of devotees to connect, once again, with the heritage of the gurus.


Haroon Khalid
has an academic background in anthropology from Lums.
 
1500 Year Old Panchmukhi Hanuman Mandir in Karachi


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A Rare piece of Jain Art in Lahore.

Jain Pilgrimage Scene on Marble Plaque.

Date: 17th century A.C.E.

Jain Mandir Gujranwala Punjab Pakistan

This marble plaque decorated with both in relief and paint, depicts holiest scene of Jaina site of Temple of Gujranwala and further transferred to Lahore Museum after 1947. The entire painting follows typical Rajisthana style.
 

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