Adil Najam
With Christmas just a few days away, churches around the world, including in Pakistan, are decked for the festive season. We wish all our Christian friends a Happy Christmas.



We were originally going to design a little ATP Christmas Card and put it up here (like Pakistani newspapers do). Instead, we thought, it better to make this into a little tour of Pakistani churches and turn it into an ATP Photo-Quiz (it has been a while since the last one). This also gives us an opportunity to write about Christian Churches in Pakistan, having written in the past about a Hindu Mandir and Sikh Gurdwara.
There are literally hundreds and hundreds of churches spread all over Pakistan, where ever Christian communities have lived in the past or now live. Here we present you with pictures of 15 of them organized into three clusters of 3, 6 and 6). How many of these Pakistani churches can you identify by name and location? And what additional information or stories do you have about them.
My own sense is that no reader would be able to identify all of them on sight, largely because they are from all over the country (Hint #1). I certainly could not have. A little Internet snooping would, of course, get you to most of them (Hint #2). And that would be perfectly fine (and educational). But before you do that, do try to see which ones you can identify immediately; I could identify 6 for sure and 2 more ‘probably.’
The top cluster (above) has three famous Pakistani churches all in the North of the country (Hint #3).
The middle cluster (below) has six more Pakistani churches all in built in classical church architectural styles and all going back to the British days (Hint #4). These include some of the most famous and largest churches in Pakistan (Hint #5) and include some Cathedrals (Hint #6).






Many of the grandest churches in Pakistan were built during the British days, but contrary to popular belief most functional churches have been built in the last 50 years, are fairly small, and often in smaller towns with local congregations. Their architectures vary (much like the architectures of mosques in Europe and North America) by affluence and spirit of architectural innovation amongst the community.
The bottom cluster (below) have six more Pakistani churches with more innovative architectural styles. The first two are pre-independence (Hint #7), the remaining four much more recent (Hint #8).






The city most represented in these 15 pictures is Karachi (Hint #9), although I suspect there are as many – if not more – churches in Lahore; but I may be wrong. I should also add that although there is a large diversity of functional churches operational in Pakistan, at least two of the churches featured here were recently the subject of cowardly acts of violence and displays of religious intolerance (Hint #10) that I, as a Pakistani, am deeply shamed by.
Photo credits will be added later with answers.
Happy Christmas to all my christian friends. A couple of churches shown above are affiliated with institutions that have given me the best education I could hope to get in Pakistan: O-levels from St. Paul’s High School and A-levels from St. Patrick’s high school, karachi. These places would always have a special place in my heart.
#5(Middle) is ‘nt the regal church.
Actually, Saadia, the Nathiagali one is up there… No. 11… so you helped identify that one.
Really appreciate for this post at the right time.
Being studied at St.Jude’s School Karachi, how could I forget the St.Patrick’s Cathedral’s gorgeous building which is in the middle cluster (#4).
Anyone going to Saddar from Cantt Area can easily remember this beautiful building.
#5 (Middle cluster) : Convent of Jesus in Mary in Lahore ( I vaguely recall so I am 50-50 on that)
#6 (Middle cluster): It is the Holy Trinity Church , close to the Zainab Market on the back of the good old Metropole Hotel on Abdullah Haroon Road.
# 7 (Middle cluster): St. Joseph’s church in the St.Joseph’s convent school. It is in the same vicity (Saddar)of the St.Patrick’s cathedral.
#8 (Middle Cluster) : The famous Lahore Cathedral Church next to the Cathedral school. One of my friends used to study there.
#10 (Bottom cluster) : Methodist church again in Karachi.
#11:(Bottom cluster) : It is somewhere in the northern areas it seems to be in Gailat of NWFP (not sure).
# 14 and # 15 : These churches are probably in Islamabad, I remember one close to Melody Market if you go towards the blue area.
Great post – the architecture is wonderful to see all laid out in a series like that! (Though I confess some of the pleasure I derived from it was solely due to my aesthetic conditioning in the British architectural condition! THey had a knack for imposing buildings emanating a certain dignity.)
I did an internet search like you suggested and saw a couple of pictures in someone’s flickr set (a Briton who lived in Peshawar for a while) that you might like to add. The church under construction in Bannu, NWFP and the picture of the church in Islamabad. Please see:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/20421570@N00/sets/721 57594303272409/detail/
Again, kudos for a fresh take and a great way to wish everyone in Pakistan a Merry Christmas!