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8 - Christians in Pakistan and Afghanistan
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- By Sara Singha
- Edited by Daniel Philpott, University of Notre Dame, Indiana, Timothy Samuel Shah, Georgetown University, Washington DC
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- Book:
- Under Caesar's Sword
- Published online:
- 26 February 2018
- Print publication:
- 15 March 2018, pp 229-258
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- Chapter
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Summary
Violence, persecution, and discrimination are commonly associated with Christian minorities in both Pakistan and Afghanistan. In these two Muslim majority countries, political instability, corruption, and lack of oversight creates an environment that is ripe for radicalism and violence. Church bombings, suicide bombings, assassinations, and targeted killings are common in both nations which are rife with ethnic, tribal, linguistic, and sectarian distinctions. In this paper, I discuss the challenges facing Christians in Pakistan and briefly engage Afghanistan were comparisons are helpful to the context of Christian persecution in the region. I complicate the religious landscape and argue that Christians experience persecution for several reasons that are not limited to religion but also include socio-economic, ethnic, and caste issues. Next, I describe how Christians respond to persecution, discrimination, and violence and the strategies they utilize to contend political space and negotiate religious boundaries and social restrictions. While Christian persecution is a reality in Pakistan and Afghanistan, so is Christian resilience. These communities, while small and disenfranchised, are sociopolitically engaged and vigorous in their resistance to oppression.
10 - The Challenge and Leaven of Christianity in Pakistan
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- By Sara Singha, Georgetown University
- Edited by Allen D. Hertzke, University of Oklahoma, Timothy Samuel Shah, Georgetown University, Washington DC
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- Book:
- Christianity and Freedom
- Published online:
- 05 February 2016
- Print publication:
- 15 February 2016, pp 284-305
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- Chapter
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Summary
INTRODUCTION
In this paper, I discuss the contemporary experience of Christians in Pakistan. In the first section, I describe the role of Christians during the partition of India. This includes the coalition between Christians and the Muslim League in the mid-1940s, which resulted in the migration of many Christians to Pakistan. I argue that this coalition movement was a sign of mutual trust between Christians and Muslims prior to the formation of Pakistan.
Next, I describe the constitutional changes that occurred after Partition – I argue that these changes were fueled by a national anxiety about the relationship between Islam and the state and, in some instances, constricted freedom for religious minorities. In the final section, I describe the multiple challenges facing Christians in the social context, including discrimination, the pressure of religious conversion, and the Blasphemy Law. I also show Christian responses to sociopolitical discrimination through various means and methods, including the formation of political parties and social institutions such as schools, clinics, and hospitals.
DEMOGRAPHY
Most Pakistani Christians are ethnically Punjabi and divided into many denominations. The Protestant Church in Pakistan is the result of low-caste Hindu conversions to Christianity in the nineteenth century. The largest Protestant denomination, with almost 27 percent of the Christian population, is the Church of Pakistan (COP), which was inaugurated in 1970 through a union of Anglicans, Methodists, Lutherans, and Scottish Presbyterians. The next largest denomination is the Presbyterian Church of Pakistan, which was formed in 1990 by the merger of the United Presbyterian Church and the Lahore Church Council. Both the United Presbyterian Church and the Lahore Church Council suffered a schism in 1968 that led to the creation of the Presbyterian Church, which has a sizable following. Other Protestant denominations include the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, Baptists, Brethren, Church of Christ, Church of St. Thomas, the Evangelical Church, Eastern Orthodox, Pentecostals, Salvation Army, and Seventh-Day Adventists.
The largest Christian denomination is the Roman Catholic Church, with approximately one-third of the population. In contrast to Protestants, many Catholics are descendants of affluent families from South India or converts from high-caste Hindu backgrounds. There is a sizable Catholic Goanese presence with ancestral connections to Portuguese conversions during the sixteenth century. There is also a small Anglo-Indian community, the result of intermarriage between British Christians and Indians.