All Saints Church, Srinagar

All Saints Church, also known as All Hallows Church, is a historical Protestant church in Srinagar that is part of the Church of North India, a province of the worldwide Anglican Communion.[1] All Saints Church falls within the Diocese of Amritsar and along with Holy Family Catholic Church, is one of the two Christian churches in the city.[1] The church is dedicated to All Saints.

All Saints Church, Srinagar
LocationSrinagar
CountryIndia
DenominationChurch of North India
Weekly attendance75-125
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Specifications
Capacity150-250
Administration
DioceseDiocese of Amritsar
DistrictSrinagar
Clergy
Bishop(s)P. K. Samantaroy
Priest in chargeRev. Eric Tarsem & Rev. Vinoo Kaul
Minister(s)Rev. Eric Tarsem
Deacon(s)Rev. Vinoo Kaul

History

All Saints church dates from the 1890s - at the time when the opening of the Jhelum Valley road, and the establishment of a British Residency in Kashmir, prompted an increasing number of Brits to come to Srinagar. It was a hill station - a place to escape the heat of the plains. And for a few hundred among the British, it became their home. There was a club, a posh hotel (Nedou's), a social scene, many houseboats - and also, in time, a church.

Architecture

All Saints has changed hugely over the past 120 years. Only the base of the tower remains from the original construction. The church had been burnt down during protests in the 1960s and again in the 1970s. It was rebuilt using a Russian design, and making less use of wood to make it less vulnerable to fire.[2] It was badly hit - along with so much of riverside Srinagar - in the 2014 floods. But it has recovered and is well maintained.

References

  1. Satish, DP (9 December 2014). "J&K polls: Invisible native Christians, least talked about and most neglected". CNN-IBN. Retrieved 13 February 2016. Jammu and Kashmir's summer capital Srinagar has two churches - Holy Family Catholic Church on Maulana Azad road and the Protestant's All Saints Church near Sher-E-Kashmir cricket stadium.
  2. "A week in Kashmir: the church". ANDREW WHITEHEAD. Retrieved 27 July 2020.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.