As more churches are set on fire or vandalized, observers note that the situation is getting out of hand and hasn’t received the attention it deserves. Since the discovery of unmarked graves at a residential school in Kamloops, B.C., at the end of May and heightened outrage over the deaths of children in residential schools, 21 churches have been lit on fire and another 32 have been vandalized as of mid-July. Catholic, Anglican, Methodist, United, and Presbyterian Churches participated in residential schools, but some of the churches set on fire were from other denominations, including Lutheran, Mennonite, Baptist, and Alliance. On July 19, the St. George Coptic Orthodox Church in Surrey, B.C., was destroyed by fire, even though its historic roots and dominant ethnicity is Egyptian. Rev. Dr. Andrew Bennett, program director of Religious Freedom and Faith Community Engagement at Cardus, says the acts of arson haven’t been adequately condemned …