John Joseph (bishop) (original) (raw)

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Pakistani Catholic bishop

The Right ReverendJohn Joseph
Bishop of Faisalabad
Church Roman Catholic
Diocese Faisalabad
In office 1984–1998
Predecessor Paolo Vieri Andreotti
Successor Joseph Coutts
Previous post(s) Auxiliary Bishop of Faisalabad (1981-1984)
Orders
Ordination 18 January 1960
Consecration 9 January 1981by Joseph Cordeiro
Personal details
Born (1932-11-15)15 November 1932Khushpur, Pakistan
Died 6 May 1998(1998-05-06) (aged 65)

John Joseph (15 November 1932 – 6 May 1998) was the Roman Catholic Bishop of Faisalabad from 1984 to 1998 and is best known for committing suicide to protest the cruel treatment of Christians in Pakistan.

John Joseph was born in Khushpur, Pakistan.[1] He received his religious education at the Christ the King Seminary in Karachi and was ordained in Faisalabad on 18 January 1960. After completing a doctorate he went on to serve on the faculty of the Christ the King Seminary. On 24 October 1980 he was appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Faisalabad and ordained Bishop on 9 January 1981. On 9 January 1984 he became Bishop of Faisalabad. He committed suicide by shooting himself on 6 May 1998, in protest at the execution of a Christian man on trumped up blasphemy charges by Muslims in Pakistan.[2][3]

Three new publications on Bishop John Joseph have been published since the bishop's death. "A Peaceful Struggle" is a compilation of the bishop's writings on matters related to justice and peace. The 197-page book was compiled by the Faisalabad diocesan human rights office, led by Father Khalid Rashid Asi. A translation of the English-language book into Urdu has also been published. The third book, "Sermons in Blood", is a 110-page book written by labor activist Gulzar Wafa Chaudhry. Chaudhry attempts to keep alive the revolutionary spirit that Bishop Joseph tried to initiate in protest at the situation of Christians and other religious minority communities in Pakistan.[4]

A film showing Bishop John Joseph's struggles for minority rights was screened at the South Asian film festival in Kathmandu October 4–7, 2001. The 45-minute documentary "A Sun Sets in" was produced by Waseem Anthony and showed the life of the late Bishop, the first Punjabi bishop, and his struggle for Pakistani Catholics.[5]

The Bishop John Joseph Memorial Hall in Darulaloom Jamia Rehmania madrassa in Faisalabad, was inaugurated on March 31, 2007. Bishop Joseph Coutts was present during the opening. No other Islamic seminary in the country has a building named after a Catholic priest.[6]

On Bishop John Joseph's advice Mr. Aftab Alexander Mughal and Mr. Peter Jacob wrote a book, Section 295 C, Pakistan Penal Code – Study of the History, Effects and Cases under Blasphemy Laws in Pakistan, which was published in 1995.

  1. ^ Linda Walbridge (2003). Christians of Pakistan: The Passion of Bishop John Joseph. Vol. 1 edition. RoutledgeCurzon. ISBN 9780700716562.
  2. ^ "Blasphemy Law in Pakistan".
  3. ^ Bennett-Jones, Owen (2003). Pakistan: Eye of the Storm. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. p. 19. ISBN 0-300-10147-3.
  4. ^ "UCANews.com May 27, 1999".[_permanent dead link_]
  5. ^ "UCANews.com October 13, 2001". Archived from the original on November 29, 2021.
  6. ^ "UCANews.com October 26, 2007".[_permanent dead link_]