Congregants mourn loss of Downtown Eastside community church in overnight fire
CBC
Congregants say the loss of Street Church on Vancouver's Hastings Street won't soon be forgotten as a place of refuge and community after the building was destroyed in an overnight fire Wednesday.
The church burned down after a fire started in an adjoining building in the 100 block of East Hastings Street in the Downtown Eastside.
"I can't believe it's still happening. My heart is so broken," said pastor Christina Dawson, who came to the church three years ago.
She watched Wednesday night as the fire spread across the building.
"As you can see flames going up, and smoke billowing out, I could see that and I'm screaming and crying, 'no, no, why?'"
She says the church helped her out of homelessness three years ago and has become a place of refuge to many others in the Downtown Eastside.
"Coming to Street Church it really comforted me and made me feel rested," said Dawson. "A place to rest and a place to have something to eat."
The church was known for serving meals to about 100 to 200 people a day for years, and while those numbers dwindled during the pandemic, it kept its familiar nickname.
"A lot of people called it the 'hot dog church' because we serve hot dogs," said Dawson.
"That church was very important in a community like this," said churchgoer Marc Lawrence.
"I didn't go to that church for the food, I went for the message."
Fire crews were in the neighbourhood Thursday morning, working to extinguish the stubborn fire.
Officials say the fire started just after 9 p.m. Wednesday night. It took 47 firefighters to finally put it out the next morning.
Investigators are still looking into what sparked the fire in the alleyway, the third major fire in the area in three months.