The Daily Telegraph

Stonewall behind Church’s trans tips for young

Controvers­ial LGBT charity gave grant to fund two editions of guidance on ‘inclusive’ schools

- By Tim Sigsworth

CHURCH OF ENGLAND guidance telling primary schools that children as young as five can be transgende­r was funded by Stonewall, it has emerged.

The controvers­ial LGBT charity gave the Church a grant to fund two editions of the Valuing All God’s Children report, including the 2019 version that remains in use nationwide. It comes after Christian parents urged the Archbishop of Canterbury to withdraw the guidance, which says primary school-aged children can change gender identity and advises schools on how to create “inclusive” environmen­ts.

The Rt Rev Paul Butler, the Bishop of Durham, told the General Synod, the Church’s legislativ­e body, last year that Stonewall was not involved in writing the report.

Gender-critical campaigner­s have called for the guidance to be scrapped, and said the revelation that it had been funded by Stonewall should be a “wake-up call” for the church.

Last month, The Telegraph revealed that a Church of England primary school had allowed a four-year-old boy to join as a girl and then hid the child’s sex from other pupils, who were later described by parents as traumatise­d.

Valuing All God’s Children tells Church of England schools that pupils should be “at liberty to explore the possibilit­ies of who they might be without judgement or derision”.

The Rt Rev Jonathan Frost, the Bishop of Portsmouth, has now admitted in a written response to a question submitted to Synod that Stonewall funded the report’s second and current third editions, published in 2017 and 2019 respective­ly.

Gender-critical campaigner­s have criticised Stonewall for its training, which encourages employees to always state their pronouns and use gender-neutral language.

The Bishop of Portsmouth said that the funding, the value of which neither the Church nor Stonewall have disclosed, was given by Stonewall after the Department of Education gave the charity a “significan­t grant” for “work in this area”.

“They recognised the quality of our work in Valuing All God’s Children, so were keen that we should be enabled to develop it to include the prevention of transphobi­c bullying through an updated version,” he said. “Stonewall were not involved in the writing of our document but simply passed on a grant to enable us to do so, and to help with the distributi­on costs.”

Two Stonewall executives are thanked in the 2017 and 2019 editions: Dominic Arnall, who was head of projects from 2015 and 2018; and Sidonie Bertrand-shelton, head of education programmes from 2016 to 2022.

Valuing All God’s Children is being updated after the Department for Education (DFE) published a consultati­on in December on new guidance for schools on how to respond to gender-questionin­g pupils. That DFE guidance does not use the word transgende­r and says children cannot change their legal sex.

Andrea Williams, chief executive of Christian Concern and a former lay member of Synod, said: “It is time for [the guidance] to be scrapped and for the Church of England to shape its guidance on the Bible,” she added.

Helen Joyce, director of advocacy at Sex Matters, said: “This is further evidence of Stonewall’s influence, and how it has embedded policies that run counter to equalities law and safeguardi­ng. The Church of England probably entered into this arrangemen­t in good faith. But it should come as a wake-up call for the Church – and all other school leaders – to put safeguardi­ng first and refuse to take money from or work with any organisati­on that does not.”

The Church of England and Stonewall were approached for comment.

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