Posted on 07/02/2005 8:15:23 PM PDT by underlying
The raid came after an article appeared in a national Urdu daily and accusations by Islamic extremists. On 12 June, the Nawa-I-Waqt newspaper denounced the sale in open markets by Christians of audio and video tapes about the lives of the prophets. The article claimed that some CDs amounted to character assassination of the prophets. The daily reported also reactions of Muslims clerics to the news; these not only issued a fatwa but called for the opening of a blasphemy case.
The journalist who penned the article then indulged in mistaken conclusions and interpretations about the figure of St Paul and the films sold, all products according to the author of a Jewish company. He even underlined that St Paul was a devout Jew dedicated to the persecution of Christ and Christians.
Mgr Evarist Pinto, archbishop of Karachi, told AsiaNews this was a grave matter and it would be taken up with the Minister for the Interior.
Fr Arthur Charles of the archdiocese of Karachi said on 12 June at 2am at night, the police had already tried to enter the sisters convent of the Daughters of St Paul, but they were stopped by the security guard who did not allow them to enter at that hour of night. The following day, the police went to the library, they shut some clients and sisters there and started to search through material, searching for CDs and videos.
The Karachi archdiocese has issued a statement condemning the police incursion and the false accusations leveled against the library of the Daughters of St Paul: The June publication of unfounded news in a small Urdu-language newspaper has deeply hurt the feelings of Pakistani Christians and damages the cause of dialogue and solidarity among Christians and Muslims in the country.
According to the statement, the article is riddled with distortions of reality made to put Christians in a bad light and it is untrue that the films sold in the library are produced by a Jewish firm. Nor is it true, continues the statement, that there is an intention to screen them in all the country. Most videos sold by the sisters have been available throughout Pakistan for decades and they are based on the Bible; they aim only to strengthen the faith of the local Christian community.
The statement also explains that St Paul is a key figure of Christian evangelization and his anti-Christian stand belonged to the time before his conversion. Among those who became Christians, many were Jews and had been against Jesus, continues the statement.
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