Pakistan’s transgender community gets its own church

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Church services for 26-year-old Angel were once an ordeal. The congregation at her Karachi church would not allow her to read from the bible or sing and she could only sit at the back, out of sight.

As one of Pakistan’s transgender community, Angel was no stranger to bullying and harassment, but the discrimination at church was particularly hurtful.

“I used to go to church many times, but people used to laugh and behave strangely,” she told the Telegraph. “It was a very painful time.”

So the opening of Pakistan’s first transgender church has been life-changing for her. Here, those used to being mocked and abused say they have found respite in a worship place of their own

The First Church of Eunuchs, which gathers in an informal space rather than an actual building, is the only one for transgender Christians in Pakistan.

“We no longer have to worry about worship,” explained Angel. “Now we have our own church and we worship here. Now there is [some] peace in life.”

In 2018, Pakistan introduced what were hailed as the most progressive legal protections for transgender people in Asia. The legislation allows them to identify their own gender on official documents and guarantees protection from harassment.

Pakistan’s last census in 2017 recorded some 10,000 transgender people, though the real figure is thought to be significantly higher.

Yet in reality, discrimination and physical attacks remain rife and many say they still have few income opportunities beyond sex work and begging.

“Words cannot describe how difficult it was for a trans to go from church to church,” said Angel, who runs a beauty parlour in Karachi’s Buffalo colony. “When sitting on the seats, the people sitting together would separate. Some would say it’s a woman’s place. Don’t sit here.”

“The Lord is as much ours as the common people.”