Pakistan (MNN) — Details are starting to emerge from the weekend’s deadly Easter blast targeting Pakistani Christians.
At least 49 of the men, women, and children killed in the attack were Christ-followers, reports Bruce Allen of https://www.mnnonline.org/mission_groups/forgotten -missionaries-international - Forgotten Missionaries International .
Newlywed Christian couple killed in the blast.
(Photo, caption courtesy FMI)
“Our partners and their families are okay, but they’re starting to
tell the stories of these victims and showing pictures,” shares Allen.
“A newlywed couple, just fairly-recently married, and both of them were killed. A young man who worked in the hospital.”
Major news outlets like http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35910124 - BBC News , http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/lahore-blast-pa kistan-suicide-bombing-childrens-body-parts-everywhere-playg round-a6955961.html - The Guardian ,
and others claim in their reports that “most of the attack victims were
Muslim.” However, FMI’s National Director has spoken with victims’
families and gathered documentation to confirm the death toll of
Christians is indeed 49.
Please continue to pray, as that number could rise in the days ahead.
There are believers among the hundreds of people seriously wounded
during the suicide bombing on Easter Sunday. Pray that they will receive
the care they need, and that their circumstances could lead to Gospel
opportunities.
Lahore bombing
On http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/mar/28/lahore-bombing- victims-buried-grief-anger-security - Easter Sunday , thousands of families entered through the gates of the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulshan-e-Iqbal_Park - Gulshan-e-Iqbal Park , a large recreational space in Lahore. The crowd at the park that day was “unusually large,” an eyewitness told http://www.dawn.com/news/1248259/at-least-72-killed-in-suici de-blast-as-terror-revisits-lahore/print - Dawn News .
Haroon
Wasim was a Christian victim of the deadly Easter deadly attack in
Lahore, Pakistan. He worked at Shaukat Khanum Memorial Hospital as a
nurse. The young medic was celebrating the holiday in Gulshan-e-Iqbal
Park, when the terrorist of the Taliban blew himself up in the crowded
leisure land and claimed the lives of 72 innocent people.
(Photo, caption courtesy FMI)
When a suicide bomber entered the park and triggered his
explosives, the resulting detonation took 70 lives and wounded hundreds
of people.
“Not all the victims were Christians; there were a significant number
of Muslims in the park as well. But, the faction of radical terrorists
that claimed responsibility for the attack…made it very clear that they
were targeting Christians,” says Allen.
Following the bombing, Punjab–the province where Lahore is
located–was put on “red” alert. The leadership team of FMI’s ministry
network advised all pastors and church planters in the province to
“avoid unnecessary travel.” Ministry is continuing today, but in limited
fashion.
Allen is requesting prayer for the following:
- Often, the believers who die in attacks like these are leaders in
the Christian community, so there is a significant void to fill.
- Many Christians retreat in fear, and they need to be challenged and mobilized to be salt and light in their communities.
- Because of military or government responses, logistical hurdles increase.
Connection to Mumtaz Qadri
The Taliban’s Pakistani branch–Jamaat-ul-Ahrar–claimed responsibility
for the Easter bombing, but the attack isn’t necessarily an isolated
incident. http://www.reuters.com/article/us-pakistan-blast-idUSKCN0WV0 FC - Yesterday , the group issued a new threat via Twitter.
Terrorists are not the only threat to Pakistani Christians. At the
same time as a suicide bomber wreaked havoc in Lahore, thousands of
demonstrators made a set of demands clear on the streets of Islamabad.
According to http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/mar/29/lahore- carnage-pakistan-jihadists-christians - The Guardian , these are among the protestors’ top requests:
- Officially acknowledge https://www.mnnonline.org/news/future-of-blasphemy-laws -in-question/ - Mumtaz Qadri as a “martyr.”
- Grant immunity to anyone killing in the prophet Muhammed’s name.
- The execution of https://www.mnnonline.org/news/asia-bibi-the-case-for-r eligious-freedom-in-pakistan/ - Asia Bibi.
A
montage of people who were killed, injured, and mourning after the park
bombing which killed more than 70 people, the majority of whom were
Christian.
(Caption, image courtesy of FMI)
As recounted https://www.mnnonline.org/news/muslim-clerics-praise-as sailant-for-murdering-blasphemous-governor/ - here ,
Mumtaz Qadri came to fame in Pakistan when he murdered then-governor
Salmaan Taseer. Taseer was an outspoken critic of Pakistan’s infamous
blasphemy laws, which are often used to persecute the Christian
minority.
Qadri was executed at the end of February, in accordance with Pakistani law. However, resolute https://www.mnnonline.org/news/tensions-rise-over- asia-bibi/ - calls for Bibi’s death have been on the rise ever since.
“The Christian community had the feeling that there would be backlash
from Qadri’s execution, especially on festivals like Easter,” Shamoon
Gill, a Christian activist and spokesperson for the All Pakistan
Minorities Alliance, told http://tribune.com.pk/story/1074300/worst-fears-come-true-fo r-christians-in-easter-attack/ - The Express Tribune .
“We feared that something might happen.”
How to help Pakistani Christians
This week’s events make one thing abundantly clear: Pakistani Christians are in trouble.
“They want people around the world to understand their plight,” says
Allen. “When we hear a story like this; it’s easy to focus on [the
statistics]: the total number of people killed, the number of people
injured.
“Those numbers represent individual lives and individual families that are impacted.”
Now that you know, here’s what you can do to help:
PRAY
“[Pakistani Christians are] trying to come together as a community to
support one another. That’s a very crucial element…to ‘bear one
another’s burdens,'” Allen says, adding that Christians in the West
should follow suit.
“When one part of the Body (of Christ) suffers, we all suffer.”
GIVE
Though short-term mission trips to Pakistan may not be possible, you
can still send believers the help they need through FMI. Better yet,
that assistance gets multiplied, by God’s grace.
Pakistani
Christians gather in the home of a church member in Lahore for Easter
worship and fellowship in the hours prior to the bombing.
(Photo, caption courtesy FMI)
“When people provide resources for our church planters and
evangelists, the impact isn’t just ‘one-to-one’ accounting,” explains
Allen. For example, when donors provide a Bible, “it’s amazing how many
people share that one resource.”
A single Bible is often shared by 6 Christian families. Listening
groups of up to 20 people gather on a regular basis to hear God’s Word
from Scripture CDs.
http://forgottenmissionaries.org/build-a-partnership/ 111;nline-giving/ - Equip national missionaries through FMI’s Tangible Resources Fund. Or, you can partner with a Pakistani pastor through http://forgottenmissionaries.org/build-a-partnership/ 111;nline-giving/ - monthly sponsorship.
“To support one of the church planters is a great encouragement to
them– to know that there is someone praying for them and their
ministry…and supporting them financially, so they don’t have to leave
the ministry.”
Source: http://www.mnnonline.org/ -