YWAM Missionaries Blanket Pakistan With God’s Love

Pakistan protests
Share:

On the morning of March 9, residents of a Christian neighborhood in the city of Lahore, Pakistan, fled for their lives following reports that a large mob was on its way to raze their homes to the ground. Kala Jee was in the neighborhood at the time.

“The police came and told us to go away,” he recalls. A big, angry mob of 7,000 Muslim men had gathered on the main road; they had sticks and chains with them. “We left and spent the next two nights with families elsewhere,” Kala Jee adds.

The now nearly empty neighborhood of Joseph Colony was looted and the homes of 250 families and at least two churches were torched. It is reported that hundreds of Bibles were also burned. The hostile emotions leading to this destruction were stirred up after a young Muslim man alleged that his long-time Christian friend had committed blasphemy.

Christians in Pakistan make up just 1.6 percent of the population and are largely uneducated, poor and marginalized. Previous attacks on Christian communities include the destruction of the village of Shantinagar in 1997, and the burning of the Christian district of Gojra in 2011, when nine people lost their lives. As on previous occasions, immediately prior to this recent attack the police warned Christians to evacuate; though their departure prevented physical violence, it left their properties vulnerable to destruction.

Around 300 families have been affected by the destruction of property; people are destitute and going hungry. The government has promised that funds to repair homes will be allocated and that they will compensate each family up to $5,000. In the meantime, families are growing more desperate, wandering aimlessly around the shells of their burned out and looted homes. In the immediate aftermath of the attack, people took shelter with other families at night, themselves living below the breadline; now they have been moved into a tent city.

YWAM Pakistan has had experience in responding to the needs of disaster victims. They were part of the response to the 2005 earthquake, and the 2010/11 floods. At various times, they have offered assistance to persecuted Christians in scattered villages and colonies in Punjab and Sindh, the two largest provinces of the nation. As a result of this experience, YWAM has good collaborative relationships in the region, and is working with others to deliver immediate aid to bring stability and security to the minority Christians currently accommodated in tents.

YWAM Pakistan is also involved in long-term development, seeking to educate and train future leaders within this minority group. They are researching long-term development solutions, such as the founding of a school and leadership training for children and young people.

+ posts
Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

How You Can Live With Purpose and Passion

By Joyce Meyer Have you noticed that some Christians are never satisfied or happy? They always have a long face, and they always talk about their problems and circumstances. Their attitude is lukewarm, lifeless, apathetic and pathetic. The world may...

Are You Under Spiritual Authority or in a Cult?

In the latest Demon Slayer podcast with Alexander Pagani, Isaiah Saldivar, Mike Signorelli and Vlad Savchuk, the four men of God got down to talking about the importance of Christians having a spiritual covering, and how to know if your...

United Methodist Church Drops LGBTQ Clergy Ban

There was no debate when the United Methodist Church repealed the decades-old ruling which prohibited “self-avowed practicing homosexuals” from serving as ministers within the denomination. For the many who have witnessed a mass exodus from the church founded by John...

God Needs Your Voice with Emma Stark

80. God Needs Your Voice Let’s not be disingenuous, God has proven through the millennia, and according to His holy Bible, that He uses the voice of humans to decree His will among the nations. Remember Moses and His encounter...

Is Profanity Acceptable for Christians?

Profanity is one of the things that we cannot escape in our world today. For Christians, we are called to live in but not be of the world. However, what is the proper response we can have to a topic...

1 2 3 4 5 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top