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. The Pakistani Taliban faction that claimed the attack said it had targeted Christians.
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.
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Christians are frequently the target of militant attacks in Pakistan, including a double suicide bombing that killed 82 people at a church service in Pakistan's northwestern city of Peshawar in 2013 and church attacks in Lahore in 2015 that killed 17.
"We need much consolation," Anjum, pastor of the Children's Chapel in Youhanabad says. "We have become tired, we are worried, have become scared.
"See, we pray that this country should remain safe forever. We are Pakistanis, we love Pakistan."
Christians were hurt in Sunday's attack because it took place on Easter -- but there were also Muslim victims, he says. "Our Muslim brothers... Those families are crying too.
"We are all being hit by this, Christians and Muslims also."
"I tried to pump my son's chest and give him CPR but he was no more. He died right in front of me," Mutahir's father Javed Bashir tells AFP as relatives wail around him.