November 11, 2005
Pastor awaits word on fate of burned church
Gods greatest blessings often come costumed as
disasters
SARA MINOGUE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
St. Judes
Anglican Cathedral as it looked before fire ravaged the inside last Saturday.
The igloo-shaped church was built by volunteers in 1972, and has been a landmark
in Iqaluit ever since. (FILE PHOTO)
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The pews are still standing, but are black with soot. Triangle wedges of plexiglass
point downwards from the skylights, melted by the heat of the blaze. Broken
glass covers the floor, from lights that shattered.
The charred altar may be beyond repair.
It smells like a big, burned oven, said the churchs pastor,
Capt. Ron McLean, as he surveyed the cold, charred interior of Iqaluits
igloo-shaped church, three days after someone broke into St. Judes Cathedral
and set a fire on or near the altar this past Saturday.
McLean hopes the building will be salvageable but as of Nunatsiaq News
press time on Wednesday, a structural engineer had yet to give the final word
on whether the shell of the building withstood the heat from the fire.
Anglican church-goers were shocked to find yellow police tape surrounding the
soot-covered entrance to Iqaluits historic church when they arrived for
service last Sunday morning.
McLean was one of the first people at the fire scene after he got a call from
Jimmy Kownirk, who was next door in the parish hall preparing for a five-day
youth mission that began Wednesday, when he saw smoke.
By the time McLean called the fire department it was 9:15 p.m. He remained
on the scene until about 1 a.m., and was back the next morning at 8 a.m., photocopying
like mad to replace hymn books that were destroyed in the blaze in time
for a 9:45 a.m. Remembrance Day service at the parish hall, followed by the
Inuktitut service.
You dont quit, McLean said.
Out of this, something good is going to come, he added. Now
its just a matter of, what is that?
As proof, McLean picks up a desktop calendar with quotes from the bible for
each day. On Sunday, Nov. 6, is written: Gods greatest blessings
often come costumed as disasters.
The pastors cheerful smile trembled when he described the state of the
churchs prized artworks as heavily damaged.
Soot
covers a shelf full of complimentary bibles near the entrance to the cathedral.
(PHOTO BY SARA MINOGUE)
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St. Judes Cathedral housed several irreplaceable pieces of art, including
six huge tapestries contributed by six different Arctic communities, from the
Kivalliq to Nunavik.
The cathedral was built by volunteers in 1972, spearheaded by the late Markoosie
Peter and the late Harry Kilabuk, using mainly local materials.
The pulpit was a kamotik turned on its end; the communion railing, a kamotik
on its side. Three narwhal tusks joined to form the cross, and the pastors
microphone was held by a kakivak, or fish spear.
Queen Elizabeth II dedicated the building during a 1970 visit, when she also
presented the church with a silver bowl to fit in the soapstone font. A photo
of her was inside the building when the fire was set, along with the shovel
she used at the sod-turning ceremony.
For 33 years, St. Judes has been an ecumenical church, welcoming worshippers
of many faiths, including Baptist, United Church, Roman Catholic, Lutheran and
Presbyterian.
The church is really a sanctuary or a safe haven, McLean said.
People come to church because they find peace, they find forgiveness,
they forgive one another.
True to that sentiment, McLean said he is hoping the person or people responsible
will come forward, either to the police or to himself.
Whoever did this is angry at God or at the community, McLean said.
As hard as it might be for some people to believe, God still loves us.
And he wants them to have a better life.
It was still too early to say what exactly will happen with St. Judes
Cathedral, but any renovations will take place with preparation for the next
expansion in mind.
The
heat from the blaze was intense enough to melt the triangle-shaped plexiglass
that covers the cathedrals skylights. (PHOTO BY SARA MINOGUE)
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Plans already exist to expand the building by adding several new wings to the
outside of the igloo like snowdrifts that pile up over time. That design
was unveiled last summer, with an estimated cost of $7 million, but the goal
then was to raise the money before beginning construction.
In the mean-time, immediate repairs could be expensive.
Any renovations will require a building permit, which means the cathedral will
have to meet new building codes. That means installing washrooms, and bringing
water and sewer lines to the building for the first time.
What were going to need here is probably beyond the reach of the
North, McLean said. He expects to be fundraising outside of the territory
to cover the unexpected costs.
In that respect, media attention from across the country could be the good
news McLean was searching for.
Already, hes accepted a donation from the Nunavut Investment Group. President
Johnny Mike said the organization would provide $10,000 in manpower and equipment
to try and repair wood items such as the bishops throne and the altar.
Another Iqaluit resident hand-delivered $1,000 on Monday morning.
Iqaluits fire department were on the scene within three minutes after
several people reported smoke coming from St. Judes Cathedral on Saturday
night.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Black ashes
cover the altar, which Capt. Ron McLean said is probably damaged beyond repair.
The narwhal tusks that fit over the cross are blackened. (PHOTO BY SARA MINOGUE)
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Sandra Bourgaize, 12, was one of them. She was in a cab on the way to her grandmothers
house in the area when she saw black smoke coming out of the cathedrals
doorway. Cabbie Ross Bennett pulled up to investigate before calling the Pai-Pa
dispatcher, and delivering Sandra to her destination.
Bourgaize and a friend returned to the scene, where they watched as two fire
trucks arrived on the scene. It was scary, Bourgaize said. Both
girls cried.
Its devastating, said her mother, whose own mother went to
church every Sunday.
The fire marshal and RCMP are investigating the cause of the fire. Church services
and Sunday School will be held at the parish hall indefinitely.
Donations can be made c/o Ron McLean, St. Judes Anglican Cathedral, PO
Box 57, Iqaluit, Nunavut, X0A 0H0.
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