Arson Suspected in Blaze at Historic CA Church

FireHouse
Sept 19 2020

A historic Armenian church in San Francisco suffered heavy damage in a fire that police suspect was set by arsonists and may have been a hate crime.

The Sacramento Bee


A historic Armenian church in San Francisco was halfway destroyed by a fire that police suspect was set ablaze by arsonists.

The St. Gregory The Illuminator Armenian Apostolic Church at 51 Commonwealth Ave. in the Laurel Heights neighborhood caught on fire early Thursday morning.

Firefighters responded to the blaze just after 4 a.m., according to NBC Bay Area, and were able to extinguish the fire.

But the building sustain extensive damage in the building adjacent to the main church, with two floors of the four-story church gutted.

“The building housed Vasbouragan Hall, as well as offices for St. Gregory Armenian Church and various organizations,” the church board of trustees said in a statement told ABC 7. “The San Francisco Fire Department responded immediately, however, the building has suffered a great loss.”

St. Gregory has been the primary place of worship for many Armenians in the Bay Area dating back to its first service in November 1957. The church also has long ties to Fresno.

And in more recent years, the Holy Trinity Armenia Apostolic Church in Fresno would partner with St. Gregory for events, including young adult spiritual trips.

Armenian community leaders told ABC7 the fire was set in three separate locations in the building: Sunday School classrooms, the church office and in the Hamazkayin Library.

District Attorney Chesa Boudin tweeted out calling the suspected arson an “Outrage.”

“The Armenian community of San Francisco woke up today to an arson at their church. There is no room for this cowardly, hateful, criminal conduct in San Francisco. We stand with the Armenian community against hate,” he said.

SFGate said church leaders believe this could be related to the vandalism that happened at San Francisco’s Armenian School Krouzian-Zekarian-Vasbouragan in July. The school walls were vandalized with graffiti that conveyed anti-Armenian messages.

Investigators have classified the vandalism as a hate crime and the suspects in that case remain at large, police told NBC Bay Area.