Esperanza para Pakistan
Esperanza para Pakistan (4)
In churches throughout the developed world we have benefit of having Sunday School on a weekly basis giving us the opportunity to learn, grow, and fellowship taking our relationship with God to another level, but in nations around the world they do not have this privilege because of extreme poverty, restricted religious rights, and persecution.
Pakistan, a nation where only 1% of the population are Christians are spiritually starving for a word from God, and the Hope Movement has a vision to create Sunday Schools in several churches, and to train churches throughout Pakistan on how to establish Sunday Schools in their churches utilizing the finances and resources that they have available, providing education to raise up a generation of transformation.
Budget: 5,000
Bible/ Educational Material Distribution
The word of God is essential for spiritual growth, and inspiration, but in a nation where less than 1% of the population are Christians individuals do not have access to bibles and educational materials which provide them with the knowledge and tools to empower, inspire, and transform. The Hope Movement Pakistan, a united people of God flood the streets on a weekly basis providing bibles and educational/ counseling materials to people in need, expanding their knowledge on developing a closer relationship to Jesus, how to impact their families and communities, health issues, and inspiring them to utilize their knowledge to bring hope to the hopeless, transforming communities into havens of hope.
Budget: $4,000
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The Punjabis, Pashtuns, and Sindhis make up 75 percent of the population of Pakistan’s ethnic groups. Other groups include immigrants from India (known as Muhajirs) and Afghan refugees. English, the official language, is used in government and business matters and is taught in schools. There have been discussions to replace English with the Urdu language—recognized as the “unifying” language throughout the country. Introduced in the eighth century, Islam became the country’s official state religion in 1956. Today, Pakistan has the second-largest Muslim population in the world behind Indonesia. Approximately 97 percent of Pakistanis are Muslim. Christians and Hindus make up most of the remaining three percent.
Pakistan emerged from British rule in 1947 as an independent sovereign state that was split into eastern and western territories. To the growing resentment of East Pakistan, the West controlled the country’s political and economic power. After several years of war, East Pakistan broke away to become the independent state of Bangladesh in March 1971. Seven years later, under military rule, Pakistan’s secular policies were replaced by the Islamic Shariah legal code.
In 1988, Benazir Bhutto, daughter of a popular former president of Pakistan, became the country’s first female prime minister. The economic and political situation worsened in the 1990s until, in 1999, General Pervez Musharraf assumed executive powers. After being convicted of corruption and sentenced to several years in jail, Bhutto fled the country and went into hiding.
In late 2007, President Musharraf won his re-election bid, but the Supreme Court challenged the outcome, stating that the president may have been ineligible to run. Ex-prime minister Bhutto returned to the country during the turmoil to challenge the president’s legitimacy, but in November 2007, the court ruled the elections were fair and Musharraf regained his title. Bhutto was assassinated in December 2007 at an election rally, causing rioting throughout the country. In August 2008, Musharraf resigned ahead of an impeachment trial. Asif Ali Zardari, widower of Benazir Bhutto, was elected president a month later.
Pakistan’s economy has gradually transitioned from an agriculture base to a more industrialized base. Industries include textiles and apparel, food processing, pharmaceuticals, construction materials, paper products, and fertilizer. Due in large part to a lack of education and a low average family income, approximately 3.6 million children under the age of 14 work, mostly in exploitative and hazardous labor. The unemployment rate is 7.5 percent; however, the rate of underemployment is substantial among working adults. Estimates range from 25 to 33 percent of people who live below the poverty line, while nearly 85 percent live on less than two dollars per day.
The official literacy rate in Pakistan is listed as 50 percent; however, 63 percent of males are literate while only 36 percent of women can read and write. The primary school attendance rate for males is 62 percent and 11 percent lower for females. That figure drops to 23 percent and 18 percent, respectively, by the time children reach secondary school age. Pakistani children face poor access to education and health facilities. Nearly 38 percent of children under age 5 are critically underweight.
An earthquake registering a magnitude 7.6 struck the Kashmir region in northwest Pakistan in October 2005, killing more than 73,000 people—18,000 of whom were children. Millions were left homeless by the quake that destroyed half of the region’s capital city, Muzaffarabad.
The Hope Movement is expanding our reach to the middle-east, a place that is starving for stablity, understanding, love, and hope. In a land where less than 1% of the population know the one true living God, millions live in extreme poverty, families are in a state of elimination breeding a generation of violence, and hopelessness, a new Hope Movement Chapter is being established ignite a movement of hope flooding the nation with the presence of God, hope, raising up a new generation of transformation. A generation that uses love not bullets, breaking the cycle of poverty, violence, and hopelessness.
In 2003 Sakhawat Maseeh developed a program called Pakistan Tract Society which is a community outreach ministry providing educational materials, counseling, and assistance in 26 villages, and the capital city of Islamabad, Pakistan.
Now united in the Hope Movement, the Hope Movement Pakistan Initiative has a vision to raise up a generation of transformation breaking the cycle of poverty, discrimination, violence, and hopelessness through social and spiritual Evangelism, Development & Relief of marginalized and impoverished communities transforming them into havens of hope.



