In this photo taken on July 24, 2010, Belquees Begum, wife of humanitarian leader Abdul Sattar Edhi, takes care of children living in an Edhi charity home in Karachi, Pakistan. Edhi is a devout Muslim, but critical of Islamic clerics in general, not just extremists. He says they focus on ritual, preaching hellfire and defending the faith against imagined enemies, rather than helping the poor _ which he says should be the cornerstone of all faiths. (AP Photo/Shakil Adil)
In this photo taken on July 24, 2010, Belquees Begum, wife of humanitarian leader Abdul Sattar Edhi, takes care of children living in an Edhi charity home in Karachi, Pakistan. Funded by donations from fellow citizens, his 250 centers across the country takes in orphans, the mentally ill, unwanted newborns, drug addicts, the homeless, the sick and the aged. His fleet of ambulances picks up victims of terrorist bombings, gang shootings, car accidents and natural disasters. (AP Photo/Shakil Adil)
In this photo taken on Aug. 2, 2101 humanitarian leader Abdul Sattar Edhi sits on the side of a road in Peshawar, Pakistan to collect money for flooding victims. Edhi is a devout Muslim, but critical of Islamic clerics in general, not just extremists. He says they focus on ritual, preaching hellfire and defending the faith against imagined enemies, rather than helping the poor _ which he says should be the cornerstone of all faiths. Edhi has been helping the destitute and sick for more than 60 years. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)
In this photo taken on July 24, 2010, humanitarian leader Abdul Sattar Edhi, left, has a meal with children living in one of his charity houses in Karachi, Pakistan. Edhi is a devout Muslim, but critical of Islamic clerics in general, not just extremists. He says they focus on ritual, preaching hellfire and defending the faith against imagined enemies, rather than helping the poor _ which he says should be the cornerstone of all faiths. (AP Photo/Shakil Adil)
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