In Constructed Victimhood, Carmen Celestini brilliantly depicts the different layers of Christian Patriarchy in Canada by focusing on the way some Christian nationalists project the idea of being victims due to the rapid changes in the political and social context especially around immigration from countries in the Global South. Celestini rightly argues that this victimhood idea is an imagined social construct built in the minds of different nationalist groups to create like-minded communities in the hope of maintaining control and power. It is a welcome addition to academic research on extremism, populism, Christian nationalism, and racism in Canada.