BY DAVID ROSE INVESTIGATIONS EDITOR NOVEMBER 24, 2022 11:57
An Iranian propaganda video in which dozens of children sing a song that references an apocalyptic myth about massacring Jews was filmed at a school just 15 minutes’ walk from the New London synagogue in St John’s Wood, a Jewish Chronicle investigation has revealed.
Some scenes were also shot at the nearby Islamic Centre of England (ICE), which is controlled by the Iranian regime and linked to the school. ICE is currently the subject of a statutory inquiry by the Charity Commission, as the JC disclosed last week.
The song, entitled Hello Commander, has been praised by Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who claims its popularity proves his people’s “loyalty to the system”, Iranian pro-regime media has reported. Its recording in St John’s Wood, in easy reach of several synagogues and Jewish centres, has raised serious concerns among community security officials.
They sing: “We wait for under the flag of our leaders. Tell me beloved, will you arrive soon? May Allah hasten your reappearance…
“We may be young but do not see
us as too young. For you I will rise up and you will not see me fall. From the
313, you will see I will answer the call… Take my oath of loyalty as a warrior
and servant.”
The ICE’s constitution stipulates that one of its trustees will always be the UK’s personal representative of Ayatollah Khamenei.
A report by the pro-regime Iran
Press News Agency states: “Hello Commander educates the new generation on the
ambitions of the Islamic Revolution and encourages them to be guardians to
protect those ideals, which is seen as a step towards promoting the revolution
among the generation to come.”
The school is owned by the
Iranian government and ICE’s previous director Mohammad Shomali, the previous
ICE director and reportedly its Khamenei representative, has spoken there.
The ICE has received £139,000
from taxpayers under the Covid furlough scheme. Meanwhile, the school’s
pastoral and educational standards have been scathingly criticised by Ofsted.
That probe concluded with an “official warning” and “action plan” for ICE, on the grounds it had hosted extremist speakers and that Mr Moosavi’s statements may have amounted to an offence under the Terrorism Act. A Commission statement this week says that “the trustees have failed to fully comply with the Action Plan and Official Warning and a number of further regulatory concerns also remain”.
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