Muslim charity boss called Jews ‘grandchildren of monkeys and pigs’
The Jewish community has reacted with horror at news
that the head of Britain’s biggest Muslim charity labelled Jews the
“grandchildren of monkeys and pigs”.
Heshmat Khalifa resigned from Islamic Relief
Worldwide (IRW) following the discovery of Facebook posts with virulent
antisemitic slurs, revealed by The Times.
A former trustee and director of the charity, which
has almost an £600m income including from the UN and British taxes, Khalifa
called Palestinian terror group Hamas “the purest resistance movement in modern
history”, and that labelling its armed wing a terror group was “shameful
disgrace to all Muslims”. The former charity boss also said Egypt’s president
was a “Zionist pimp”.
Islamic Relief Worldwide issued a statement
confirming his resignation, saying: ‘We are sorry to say that posts on Mr
Khalifa’s personal social media account in 2014 and 2015, which IRW was first
made aware of on 16 July 2020, contravene the values and principles of Islamic
Relief Worldwide. Islamic Relief Worldwide sincerely regrets any offence
caused.”
The charity added: “Khalifa has acknowledged that
these posts were unacceptable and has apologised for falling short of the
strict standards expected by our code of conduct.”
It also said it rejects and condemns “terrorism and
believes all forms of discrimination – including antisemitism – are
unacceptable.”
A Jewish Leadership Council spokesperson said: “The
comments made by Mr Khalifa have no place in any charitable organisation and it
is right that he has resigned immediately. Islamic Relief has been the
recipient of Department of International Development grants and, like all
registered charities, benefits from taxpayer support through the Gift Aid
scheme.
British taxpayers therefore rightly expect that
those who run charities do not use their platform to promote views which run
counter to British values.”
A Board of Deputies spokesperson said: “Mr Khalifa
ought to be ashamed of these disgraceful racist comments, which attempt to pit
two minorities against each other. Muslims and Jews must unite to fight racism
together, rather than propagate lies about each other.”
Stephen Silverman, director of investigations and
enforcement at Campaign Against Antisemitism, said: “It is appalling that Mr
Khalifa was able to lead for so long one of Britain’s largest charities whilst
expressing brazenly antisemitic views. Islamic Relief has questions to answer
about how this went unnoticed. We hope that the Charity Commission will now act
to ban him from acting as a charity trustee ever again.”
Fiyaz Mughal, Founder of Muslims Against
Antisemitism, said: “This shows why more Muslims must work to reduce
antisemitism within some small but determined sections of co-religionists. This
is coming up time and time again, and that is why Muslims Against Antisemitism
works on informing fellow Muslims around the Holocaust, the use of language and
in challenging the more ideologically driven antisemites. Such hate must have
no space in any community”.
A Charity Commission spokesperson said: “Antisemitic
and racist comments are abhorrent and have no place in charity. We have opened
a compliance case and contacted the charity for a response to these serious
allegations. The charity is cooperating with our continuing enquiries and we
have been informed that the individual has resigned as a trustee.”



