The Jewish Chronicle

Jo Cox group gave £1k to Muslim charity accused of endangerin­g teacher

- BY JC REPORTER

AN ORGANISATI­ON accused of endangerin­g the safety of a teacher who showed a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed to his class in Batley received a donation from the Jo Cox Foundation, the JC can reveal.

The foundation was establishe­d in the wake of the 2016 murder of Labour MP Jo Cox and promotes her vision of uniting communitie­s around common values.

In March it made a donation to the Batley-based Purpose of Life charity (POL) — which supported the controvers­ial Batley and Spen by-election candidate George Galloway in the runup to yesterday’s vote.

This was the same month in which POL was blamed for endangerin­g the safety of a teacher who had been suspended from Batley Grammar School for showing a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed during a Year Nine class debate on blasphemy.

POL founder and chief executive Mohammad Sajad

Hussain accused the teacher of “terrorism” and “insulting Islam”.

He said the charity would not work with the school again until the 29-year-old teacher was “permanentl­y removed” as parents began an angry protest outside its gates.

The charity was accused of endangerin­g the safety of the teacher and reported to the Charity Commission for its “reckless” actions by the Free Speech Union, but Mr Hussain remained unrepentan­t.

Speaking on the Russian news channel RT News in March, Mr Hussain said: “This sort of sadistic behaviour in a classroom with children should not be accepted.”

He added: “People seem to be abusing the rights to free speech in this country.”

The Jo Cox Foundation’s donation to POL was used to buy a computer and printer for the charity.

In a tweet on April, 22 – a month after the blasphemy row had engulfed the town – Purpose of Life posted: “Special thank you to… @JoCoxFound­ation for donating £1,000 to help us purchase much-needed equipment to manage/ run POL’s foodbank!”

The post, which was re-tweeted by the Jo Cox Foundation, added: “United we stand.” Kim Leadbeater, sister of the murdered Batley and Spen MP and Labour’s candidate in the current byelection, is an ambassador for the Jo Cox Foundation.

She has taken an unpaid leave of absence from the Foundation for the duration of the campaign.

In a statement to the JC, the Jo Cox Foundation said the donation was made on March 16, before the “incident” at Batley Grammar.

It added: “The Jo Cox Foundation awarded funding of £1,000 to the Batley-based registered charity Purpose of Life as part of a Covid grant from a local corporate partner of our Yorkshire work, PPG.

“PPG stipulated that the funding was to be used to strengthen food bank provision in the area and we funded six food banks, including Purpose of Life.”

The POL twitter account this month posted a picture of the controvers­ial Batley and Spen candidate George Galloway as he visited its West Yorkshire food bank.

The post included the hashtags #georgegall­oway #freepalest­ine and #palestine.

Mr Galloway has been accused of stoking tensions over Palestine in a byelection that has become increasing­ly mired in division.

Ms Leadbeater was filmed last week being heckled and chased on the campaign trail by a group of men in an incident condemned by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer as “disgracefu­l”.

The Foundation was set up by Ms Cox’s family a nd friends to create a “positive legacy” for her work.

Its mission statement states: “Our vision is for a kinder, more compassion­ate society where every individual has a sense of belonging and where we recognise that we have more in common than that which divides us.”

Purpose of Life was reported to the Charity Commission’

The founder accused the teacher of ‘terrorism’

 ?? PHOTOS: PA, GETTY IMAGES ?? Protesters outside the Batley school where a teacher showed an image of Mohammed to children
PHOTOS: PA, GETTY IMAGES Protesters outside the Batley school where a teacher showed an image of Mohammed to children
 ??  ?? Murdered: Jo Cox
Murdered: Jo Cox

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