Newly released RCMP documents confirm what many have long known: churches in Canada have faced increased attacks following the mainstream media’s promotion of an unproven ‘mass graves’ claim.
The RCMP released data last week to illustrate just how many instances of arson on religious institutions have been reported over the past twelve years, the vast majority of which have been on churches.
Between 2010 and 2020, there were between 13 and 58 arson cases reported. However, in 2021, after the unfounded ‘mass graves’ story was pushed, the number shot up to 90. In 2022, 74 instances were reported.
But the actual number of targeted churches is much higher. As meticulously reported by Truth North, at least 112 churches in Canada have been either burned, desecrated, or vandalized since 2021.
Of course, there remain horrifying accounts of abuse and mistreatment that took place at certain residential schools across Canada between 1883 — 1996, including documentation of a higher death rate, in some cases as high as one in twenty students (mostly due to tuberculosis).
However, since the initial report in 2021 of 215 unmarked graves in Kamloops were identified, not one body has been uncovered, and the report has been changed from “unmarked graves” to “anomalies.”
Last year, using the same technology that identified 14 “anomalies” underground at a former Manitoba residential site, an excavation turned up nothing but rocks and dirt.
City News deletes claim of 215 graves after humiliating community note
Recently, City News also falsely stated mass graves of Indigenous children were discovered at the former sites of residential schools, only to later correct their claim.
CTV also had on a BC Chief who acknowledged mass graves have never been verified, claiming that the reason they might never be found is “because [children’s bodies] were incinerated.”
It was the latest twist in the mass graves saga, which to date remains unproven, with some calling it an outright hoax.
Just like the mass graves claim, there’s no historical proof or documentation of incinerators ever being used. However, some former residential school attendees have claimed they existed.