- National Marian Shrine, Mariamabad
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A series of articles on
Roman Catholic
Mariology
General articles
Mariology • Veneration of the Blessed Virgin • History of Mariology • Mariology of the saints • Mariology of the popes • Encyclicals • Marian SocietiesDevotions
Rosary • Scapular • Immaculate Heart • Seven Joys • Seven Sorrows • First Saturdays • Acts of Reparation • Hearts of Jesus & Mary • Consecration to MaryDogmas and Doctrines
Mother of God • Perpetual virginity • Immaculate Conception • Assumption • Mother of the Church • Mediatrix • Co-Redemptrix
Expressions of devotion
Art • Hymns • Music • ArchitectureKey Marian apparitions
(approved or worthy of belief)
Guadalupe • Miraculous Medal •
La Salette • Lourdes • Pontmain • Laus • Banneux • Beauraing • Fátima • AkitaThe National Marian Shrine in Mariamabad, Pakistan is a National Shrine and the site of an annual pilgrimage for the September 8 feast of the birth of Mary. This event has been taking place since 1949. Mariamabad means city of Mary in the Urdu language.[1]
Mariamabad has existed for over a century making it one of Pakistan's oldest Catholic settlements. Located about 80 km from Punjab's capital of Lahore, it covers an area of 835 hectares (2000 acres) and has become the destination for over one million pilgrims a year.[2]
Mariamabad began in 1892. Observing the misery and oppression of the newly converted Christians in the district of Sialkot, Capuchin Bishop Van Den Bosch purchased 150 acres (0.61 km2) of government land for 650,000 rupees (US$29,545) for Christians to live and work on. In 1893, three priests and three Christian families moved to the land. [3]
Pilgrims travel by foot, bullock carts, bicycles, buses and trucks to Mariamabad. The shrine also houses the Church of St. Mary and St. Joseph established by Belgian Capuchins on December 8, 1898.[4]
A prominent feature of the shrine is the Marian grotto on a hill where a three-and-a-half-meter statue of Mary stands.
There are stalls selling religious posters and cards, crosses, rosaries, candles, incense sticks and other religious objects, as well as cold drinks, food and sweets to cater to the pilgrims that travel from all over Pakistan and even overseas.
On September 10, 2005, armed men waiting near the village stopped buses bringing pilgrims and robbed the passengers of their valuables.
The Catholic National Commission for Justice and Peace also filed a formal complaint against the police who looted buses, manhandled and searched women, and desecrated the Cross at the pilgrimage.[5]
In September 2005, Catholics from across Pakistan took part in the country's first-ever National Eucharistic Congress. More than 100,000 Catholics came to publicly honour the Eucharist during the three-day event. The event was organised under the guidance of Archbishop Lawrence Saldanha, of Lahore who is president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Pakistan.[6]
In 2006, the Parish priest was Father Emanuel Bernard.[7]
References
- ^ "UCANews.com October 2, 2006". http://www.ucanews.com/2006/10/02/archdiocese-plans-countrys-first-urdu-catholic-weekly/?key=catechetical+centre+karachi.
- ^ "AsiaNews 6 September 2004". http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=1428.
- ^ "UCANews.com February 7, 1991". http://www.ucanews.com/1991/02/07/bishop-hopes-mariamabad-shrine-will-become-the-lourdes-of-pakistan/?key=sialkot.
- ^ "UCANews.com September 10, 2008". http://www.ucanews.com/2008/09/10/bad-weather-power-cuts-dampen-annual-pilgrimage/?key=mariamabad.
- ^ "Daily Times September 16, 2005". http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_16-9-2005_pg7_26.
- ^ "Agenzia Fides 19 September 2005". http://www.fides.org/aree/news/newsdet.php?idnews=5690&lan=eng.
- ^ "UCANews.com April 3, 2006". http://www.ucanews.com/2006/04/03/catholics-mark-lent-with-pilgrimage-to-centuryold-marian-shrine/?key=mariamabad.
Categories:- Roman Catholic Church in Pakistan
- Marian shrines
- Roman Catholic National Shrines
- Pakistani building and structure stubs
- Roman Catholic church stubs
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