"Leave all other ties, Jesus is calling."
ESTHER JOHN was born Qamar Zia, on 14 October 1929, one of
seven children. As a child she attended a government school and,
after the age of seventeen, a Christian school. There she was
profoundly moved by the transparent faith of one of her teachers,
and she began to read the Bible earnestly. It was when reading
the 53rd chapter of Isaiah that she was suddenly overtaken by a
sense of conversion to this new religion.
When India was partitioned Qamar Zia moved with her family
into the new state of Pakistan. Here she made contact with a
missionary, Marian Laugesen in Karachi. Laugesen, at her request,
passed on to her a New Testament. Her Christian faith grew
privately, even secretly. Then, seven years later, she ran away
from home, fearful of the prospect of marriage to a Muslim
husband. She found her way back to Laugesen in Karachi.
For a while Qamar Zia worked in an orphanage there, and it was
at this time that she took the name Esther John. Her family still
pressed her to return and to marry, but on 30 June 1955 she took
a train north to Sahiwal, in the Punjab. Here she lived and
worked in a mission hospital, stayed with the first Anglican
bishop of Karachi, Chandu Ray, and celebrated her first
Christmas. Finding a vocation to teach, she entered the United
Bible Training Centre in Gujranwala in September 1956. In April
1959 she completed her studies there and moved to Chichawatni,
some thirty miles from Sahiwal, living with American Presbyterian
missionaries. She evangelized in the villages, travelling from
one to the other by bicycle, teaching women to read and working
with them in the cotton fields. At times her relationship with
her distant and perplexed family appeared calm; at others anxiety
and tension brewed.
Her death was sudden and mysterious. On 2 February 1960 Esther
John was found dead in her bed at the house where she lived at
Chichawatni. She had been brutally murdered.
Her body was taken to the Christian cemetery at Sahiwal and
buried. Later, a memorial chapel was built in front of the
nurses home in the grounds of the hospital there. Today, Esther
John is remembered with devotion by the Christian community with
whom she lived and worked.