Catechetical Centre, Karachi

The Catechetical Centre, Karachi is the organization responsible for catechesis in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Karachi in Pakistan.

Fr. Anjou Soares was the director of Karachi's Catechetical Centre till 1992.[1] Emmanuel Neno has been director of the Catechetical Centre from 1992 to 2002.

There are five similar organizations that make up the Association of Pastoral Institutes of Pakistan. These are the Pastoral Institute of Multan; Catechetical Centre, Karachi; Dar ul Kalam, Lahore; Pastoral Centre, Rawalpindi; and Catechists Training Centre, Khushpur.[2]

The Centre is responsible for training catechists. 34 catechists attended a November 11, 2002, training in Karachi organized to introduce the Asian Integral Pastoral Approach (AsIPA), a pastoral process promoted by the Office of Laity of the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences.[3]

The Centre also contributes to publications like the rituals [new Urdu-language texts for the Sacraments and rites] in seven volumes, published after a seven-year effort by a team led by Father Robert McCulloch, a Columban missionery, and Emmanuel Neno, director of the Catechetical Centre. The first volumes were published in 2000, following approval from the Vatican.[4]

Young Pakistani Catholics recently completed a five-week Faith Formation course set up in 1993, that helps them discover their religious identity. 32 participants from seven parishes of Karachi archdiocese attended the February 4-March 6, 2002 program at the Centre.[5]

Father Arthur Charles, director of the Centre in 2006, proposed plans to launch the first Urdu-language Catholic weekly in Pakistan. The newspaper will be called Agahi and will be based in the Centre’s office.[6]

The Centre also organises programs on liturgical music like the one titled "Proper Use of Music in Worship" on Jan. 27, 2007, at the Holy Family Hospital Auditorium. The event attracted 220 people from 12 parishes.[7]

The Catechetical Center is also home to Good News TV, the Archdiocese internet based TV channel. Part of the center has been converted into a studio.[8]

References

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