Sada-e-Umeed (En: call of hope) is an organization for children with disabilities in Khanewal, Pakistan. Khanewal, a Christian colony founded in 1970, is 500 kilometers south of Islamabad. [1] It is an initiative of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Multan.
Two Little Sisters of Jesus, Sister Cecilia, a Belgian missionary, and Pakistani Sister Zeenat started the project in 1995 and handed it over to lay people after 10 years. Sada-e-umeed got registration under the Societies Act in 2005 and has an independent board of directors. As of January 2019 [update] Mr. Francis Daniel is the chairman of the board.
On December 3, 2008, Sister Cecilia asked 200 people at a function marking the International Day of Persons with Disabilities, to be more generous with their time and money.
The program included a puppet show, speeches, tableaus and singing by disabled children. The performers were mainly from rehabilitation centers under the Sada-e-Umeed organization.
The organization runs a primary school and three centers for disabled children in the Punjab province. The primary school for Inclusive Education was formed for special children, dropouts, overage youths and slow learners
Three of the original six centers had to shut down in 2007 for lack of funds. Aamir Younis is the executive director of the organization. The other three stayed open but had to close their residential facilities and now serve 150 children and youths up to the age of 24. They provide rehabilitation services and basic skills training for youngsters who are not able to attend regular school.
The Catholic Church does not assist them financially and even the Catholic Relief Services stopped assistance in 2005. The centers are housed in rented buildings and depend on donations from local donors and foreign benefactors, but carry an operating deficit.
Each center needs at least 3,000 rupees (US$38) for rent and utilities per month. Additional funds are required for center workers to travel to remote villages to visit homes with disabled children and provide them physiotherapy, take them to hospitals for medical checkups and help parents. [2]
The centers are located in a troubled area. In 1997, 16 churches and hundreds of houses of Christians were ransacked, looted, burnt, and destroyed in Khanewal district of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Multan. [3]
The Daughters of St. Paul, also known as the Media Nuns, are an international Catholic religious congregation of consecrated women founded in 1915 in Italy.
The Catholic Church in Pakistan is part of the worldwide Catholic Church, under the spiritual leadership of the pope in Rome.
The Christ the King Seminary is a Roman Catholic seminary in Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town, Karachi, Pakistan; located in adjacent to the Portiuncula Friary. In its early years most of the faculty were provided by the Franciscans. It has been described as "the pioneering theological institution for the Catholic Church in Pakistan."
The Roman Catholic Metropolitan Archdiocese of Lahore is a Latin Metropolitan Archdiocese in Punjab province, Pakistan.
Andrew Francis was the Pakistani Roman Catholic bishop of Diocese of Multan from 2000 to 2014.
The Franciscan Missionaries of Christ the King (F.M.C.K.) is a Roman Catholic religious congregation for women that originated in what is now Pakistan and founded schools, orphanages, homes for the aged and disabled and hospitals throughout the country. They are distinct from the Franciscan Sisters of Christ the King in the United States.
Father Victor Gnanapragasam O.M.I. was the first prefect of the Catholic Apostolic Prefecture of Quetta, Balochistan, Pakistan.
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Multan is a diocese of the Latin Church of the Roman Catholic Church in Pakistan.
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Faisalabad is a diocese of the Latin Church of the Roman Catholic Church in Pakistan.
Patras Yusaf was the Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Multan from 1984 until his death in 1998.
The La Salle Higher Secondary School, Multan is a private, Catholic higher secondary school run by the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools in Multan, Punjab, Pakistan. It was founded by Bishop F.B Cialeo, OP in 1960.
The Cathedral of the Holy Redeemer is the main church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Multan, Pakistan. Father Shahzad Niamat was the cathedral parish priest, and Father Shakeel John the assistant in 2008.
Caritas Pakistan opened in 1965 and has many years of humanitarian assistance history in Pakistan. It is affiliated with Caritas Internationalis, a Roman Catholic humanitarian organisation and one of the largest networks dedicated to reducing poverty and injustice in the world.
The Apostolic Vicariate of Quetta, originally the Apostolic Prefecture of Quetta, is a Latin Church missionary territory or apostolic vicariate of the Catholic Church in Pakistan. It comprises the civil province of Balochistan and the Kachhi region of Punjab, Pakistan.
La Salle Brothers, Pakistan, formally the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools in Pakistan, is a Roman Catholic religious order for men. The De La Salle Brothers was founded in France in 1679 by Saint Jean-Baptiste de la Salle, who is also the Patron of Christian Teachers. The order was founded for setting up gratuitous schools where the children of workmen and the poor would learn reading, writing and arithmetic, and would also receive a Christian education through catechisms and other forms of instruction appropriate for forming good Christians.
St. Joseph's Cathedral, Rawalpindi, Pakistan, is the main church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Islamabad-Rawalpindi.
The Pastoral Institute of Multan, Pakistan, is aimed at aiding the local church grow into a church of witness and mission.
The Catholic Board of Education is the arm of the Roman Catholic Church in Pakistan responsible for education. Each diocese has its own board. Collectively the Catholic Church runs 534 schools, 8 colleges, and 7 technical institutes in its 2 archdioceses, 4 dioceses, and one Apostolic Prefecture.
Holy Rosary parish is a church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Faisalabad, in Warispura, Pakistan.