January 24, 2012: A youth group from St. Joseph’s Cathedral in Pakistan’s Rawalpindi
is hoping to show a friendlier side to their restive region with the launch of a new
diocesan website.
The website http://timothians.com.pk, launched on
Saturday, has details of parish events, a photo gallery of youth activities and links
to Facebook users among Timothians, the group which helped develop the project.
Daughter
of St Paul Sister Athens Angeles, the main organizer, said current events necessitated
the need to go on line in Islamabad-Rawalpindi diocese.
“We want to offer hope
and good news to a conservative society facing new challenges every day. Utilizing
the potential of youth and expressing their concerns in a Christian way seemed the
best option,” she said.
More than 60 people including Muslim web masters/developers,
seminarians and nuns attended the launch, which coincided with the feast day of St.
Timothy, in the cathedral’s compound.
“This is the first time we had invited
Muslims who hope our initiative will help counter fundamentalism and fanaticism,”
said Sr Athens, the patron of the Timothians, who financed the training of 13 young
people who took a web design course last year.
“We plan to boost a culture
of reading by publishing blogs and building communities. Keeping the site going and
sparing time for studies is the next challenge,” she said, adding that the setting
up of a chat room is in the pipeline.
Sr Athens hopes the new domain will lead
to more online progress for the local Church.
“Only a few priests are on Facebook,
while Our Lady of Lourdes Minor Seminary has only one computer,” she said.
The
northern diocese of Islamabad-Rawalpindi came under the international spotlight after
the killing of Osama bin Laden last year.
Church journalism remains limited
in the region as conflict with hardline Taliban groups rages in the northwest.