LAHORE: Shakeel Anjum spent Easter Monday burying six victims of the carnage in Lahore and says he is in pain, his head is aching. He wonders: How much further will this go? How many more bodies will he lay to rest?
The pastor's voice is heavy after presiding over service after service for Christian victims of Sunday's carnage, when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a park crowded with families enjoying the warm Easter evening.
The blast sent ball bearings ripping through children and killed 72 people while wounding scores more. A faction of the Pakistani Taliban had claimed the attack.
Anguished families spent Easter Monday burying their dead, bent over coffins in grief.
The six people that Anjum buried lived within the same two blocks of Lahore's Youhanabad area, he tells AFP, clutching a black-covered Bible in his hands.
“We are such a loving community in the country of Pakistan,” he says, referring to the country's Christian minority, which is believed to make up around 1.6 percent of the estimated population of 200 million.