232807
233033

Canada  

Service after NS church fire

Scores of people clad in white gathered Sunday for a healing service in a community gym across the street from a fire-ravaged historic church just outside Halifax.

The service was originally scheduled to take place in St. Thomas Baptist Church in North Preston, N.S., but was moved after a blaze tore through the sanctuary last Wednesday.

No one was injured, but the fire left a gaping hole in the roughly century-old building that serves as the social hub for the predominantly black community.

Tony Atuanya, the church's finance officer, said its insurance policy would cover the full cost of damages, and noted there has been a surge in donations in the wake of the fire.

Rev. Wallace Smith told the crowd that the charred structure was just a building, and that the congregation was the actual church. He estimated that on some Sundays, his church receives as many as 600 people.

About one-third of the audience left their seats to hold hands and sway before the choir as it led them through an exultant hymn, punctuated moments of contemplation.

"We don't have to be in church to serve the lord," said church trustee Ernest Simmonds. "We could do it here. We could it at home. We could do it out on the streets."

Simmonds said the damage to the church was significant, but manageable. The fire marshal has deemed the fire to be the result of an engineering problem involving a faulty motor, he told the congregation.

Colter Simmonds said he has been a member of the church for decades, but Sunday's service was the first he had attended in a year.

"I watched (the church) on fire, and I started thinking about ... the state of the community, and knowing that the church was the foundation that we all grew up on," he said.

"It could have been lost and gone, and I just felt I needed to be there to support it."



More Canada News