22-year-old Qur’an reciter realizes dream to lead Taraweeh at Saudi-founded Faisal Mosque in Pakistan

22-year-old Qur’an reciter, Muhammad Bilal Orakzai, speaks to Arab News in Islamabad, Pakistan on April 2, 2024. (AN photo)
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Updated 05 April 2024
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22-year-old Qur’an reciter realizes dream to lead Taraweeh at Saudi-founded Faisal Mosque in Pakistan

  • Muhammad Bilal Orakzai took part in nationwide three-month-long competition from which 14 qaris were selected 
  • Now qaris nightly recite portions of Qur’an and lead prayers at annual “Mehfil-e-Shabeena” event at Faisal Mosque

ISLAMABAD: As twilight descended over Islamabad’s skyline, Muhammad Bilal Orakzai stood up in front of rows of believers inside the huge, packed hall of the majestic Faisal Mosque in Pakistan’s capital of Islamabad, ready to lead Taraweeh night prayers. 

It is a huge honor that only a few are bestowed with each year, and it doesn’t come easy. 

Orakzai, 22, is one of 14 reciters of the holy Qur’an, or qaris, chosen from across Pakistan, Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan by the country’s religious affairs ministry to lead Taraweeh, special Ramadan night prayers, at Faisal Mosque. 

The 14 reciters were chosen to participate in the religious ministry’s annual “Mehfil-e-Shabeena” event at Faisal Mosque after a rigorous three-month-long competition. Now they nightly recite long portions of the holy Qur’an there and lead prayers. 

“There is no doubt in the greatness of Faisal Mosque, and to recite here, we prepare hard the whole year round,” Orakzai told Arab News in an interview this week. “And when we get the fruit of that labor, it feels very good.

“When we recite taraweeh here, people line up to shake hands with us. What are we? We are just humans, and humans are weak, but because of this Qur’an recitation [at Faisal Mosque], God has blessed us so much.”

Faisal Mosque, named after Saudi Arabia’s King Faisal bin Abdul Aziz who gave a $120 million grant for its construction, is one of Pakistan’s most prominent landmarks, built over a sprawling 54,000 square feet with a capacity to accommodate over 250,000 people at a time. 

It is the largest mosque in Pakistan and the fifth largest in the world, breaking from traditional Islamic structures like domes and instead built along clean modern lines resembling the tents used by nomadic Arab Bedouin tribes, with sloping roofs and a unique angular body.

To lead the Taraweeh at Faisal Mosque was an “honor and a dream” for any Pakistani qari, Orakzai said. 

“I would say, who wouldn’t want to recite the Qur’an at the Faisal Mosque?” he added. “I feel extremely proud.”

He described the mosque itself as “marvelous”:

“Indeed, it is one of the most marvelous mosques in the entire Muslim world and has its own value in the hearts of Muslims.”

“ULTIMATE PRIZE”

The journey to Faisal Mosque has been a long one for Orakzai, who began practicing Qur’an recitations when he was just a few years old, encouraged by his teachers and parents to take part in competitions. He memorized the entire Qur’an, which has 6,236 verses, at the age of nine.

“I have been interested in these competitions since childhood,” Orakzai, who completed intermediate studies in science from a college in Islamabad, said. 

“[My teachers] used to take me, and Alhamdulillah, I would win. 2008, 2009, 2010, in these three years consecutively I topped in Qirat [Qur’an recitation] competitions across Pakistan … Even now two months back, I secured the first position in the whole of Punjab province and qualified for the national final, which will take place after Ramadan.”

Orakzai first participated in the competition to recite the Qur’an at the Faisal Mosque in 2018 and was selected on his maiden attempt. 

“It is for the fifth time that I have been leading Taraweeh prayers at the Faisal Mosque and from the [religious] ministry, it is my third time to lead Taraweeh prayer here,” he added. 

Winning the competition once, let alone five times, is no easy task. To impress the judges, a qari must be equipped with multiple skills. 

“You must master all elements, including your accent and delivery, as the judges of the competition are PhD doctors who meticulously evaluate every aspect to determine whether you pass or fail each round,” Orakzai explained.

Today, other than focusing on his recitation skills, he also teaches at a religious school in Rawalpindi.

“I am running a religious school in Rawalpindi where I got this blessing of teaching the Qur’an to others,” Orakzai said. “I want to remain attached to the Qur’an till my last breath.”

Going forward, Orakzai has his eyes on the ultimate prize:

“I pray to Allah to bless me, that I can go abroad and have the honor [of reciting Qur’an] in Haram Sharif [in Makkah].”


Pakistan terms climate change, demographic pressures as ‘pressing existential risks’

Updated 06 December 2025
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Pakistan terms climate change, demographic pressures as ‘pressing existential risks’

  • Pakistan has suffered frequent climate change-induced disasters, including floods this year that killed over 1,000
  • Pakistan finmin highlights stabilization measures at Doha Forum, discusses economic cooperation with Qatar 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb on Saturday described climate change and demographic pressures as “pressing existential risks” facing the country, calling for urgent climate financing. 

The finance minister was speaking as a member of a high-level panel at the 23rd edition of the Doha Forum, which is being held from Dec. 6–7 in the Qatari capital. Aurangzeb was invited as a speaker on the discussion titled: ‘Global Trade Tensions: Economic Impact and Policy Responses in MENA.’

“He reaffirmed that while Pakistan remained vigilant in the face of geopolitical uncertainty, the more pressing existential risks were climate change and demographic pressures,” the Finance Division said. 

Pakistan has suffered repeated climate disasters in recent years, most notably the 2022 super-floods that submerged one-third of the country, displaced millions and caused an estimated $30 billion in losses. 

This year’s floods killed over 1,000 people and caused at least $2.9 billion in damages to agriculture and infrastructure. Scientists say Pakistan remains among the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations despite contributing less than 1 percent of global greenhouse-gas emissions.

Aurangzeb has previously said climate change and Pakistan’s fast-rising population are the only two factors that can hinder the South Asian country’s efforts to become a $3 trillion economy in the future. 

The finance minister noted that this year’s floods in Pakistan had shaved at least 0.5 percent off GDP growth, calling for urgent climate financing and investment in resilient infrastructure. 

When asked about Pakistan’s fiscal resilience and capability to absorb external shocks, Aurangzeb said Islamabad had rebuilt fiscal buffers. He pointed out that both the primary fiscal balance and current account had returned to surplus, supported significantly by strong remittance inflows of $18–20 billion annually from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) regions. 

Separately, Aurangzeb met his Qatari counterpart Ali Bin Ahmed Al Kuwari to discuss bilateral cooperation. 

“Both sides reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening economic ties, particularly by maximizing opportunities created through the newly concluded GCC–Pakistan Free Trade Agreement, expanding trade flows, and deepening energy cooperation, including long-term LNG collaboration,” the finance ministry said. 

The two also discussed collaboration on digital infrastructure, skills development and regulatory reform. They agreed to establish structured mechanisms to continue joint work in trade diversification, technology, climate resilience, and investment facilitation, the finance ministry said.