Good Morning Britain host Ranvir Singh shared a rare photo of her teenage son on Monday
A Good Morning Britain presenter posted a touching photograph with her son, who rarely appears publicly.
During Mondayâs (May 4) broadcast of the popular ITV show, presenters Ranvir Singh and Rob Rinder brought viewers up to speed on the latest developments from across Britain and internationally.
Later during the programme, Ranvir and Rob discussed a particularly significant occasion they had attended the evening before.
âLast night, Ranvir and I had the privilege to go to the â45 Aid Society event â thatâs the charity my mum runs⊠It was a beautiful thing,â Rob began.
The â45 Aid Society was established as a charitable organisation in 1963, and is run by volunteers. It was founded by a group of child Holocaust survivors, known as the Boys, who were transported to the United Kingdom following the conclusion of World War II. The Boys wished to contribute to the society that had given them refuge, reports the Mirror.
Ranvir continued: âItâs to commemorate those young boys who were brought over. They couldnât find a thousand boys who survived, they found 737. There are so few of those survivors who remain in this country, they made their life in the Lake District and other parts of the world. I think weâve got a picture with Arek Hersh.â
An image of Ranvir with the Holocaust survivor was subsequently displayed on screen, accompanied by the presenterâs 14-year-old son Tushaan, whom she shares with her former husband Ranjeet Singh Dehal. Viewers will be astonished to see how much Tushaan has matured.
The star then explained: âMy son came [to the event]. I donât often show my sonâs face on television, but I thought it was so important, so moving. We met more Holocaust survivors.â
This follows Rob discussing the appalling abuse he recently endured from a young boy, in the wake of the antisemitic stabbings in Golders Green last week.
âLet me just share with you what happened to me the other night. We talked about whether I should share it because I donât want to become the subject of any stories. I went to a great school in the afternoon, a great state school,â Rob candidly shared.
âLater on the evening, [I was] with a friend, it was relatively late in the evening, we were walking along Carnaby Street, and a kid comes along on a bike and he stops. He could tell, he sort of clocked it was me, and he decided to spat (sic) out â I use that language liberally â his favourite lyric.
âNow, what was that lyric? Now, just to be clear, Iâm going to use it and share it [with] people at home. Itâs in history books and people know. He said Heil Hitler at me, [laughed] and drove off. I want to be clear, I didnât feel threatened, I didnât feel like I was a victim in any way.â
Elsewhere on todayâs programme, Ranvir and Rob hosted a debate about whether the Royal Family ought to be open about their finances, following a report which disclosed that Prince William pays approximately ÂŁ7m in tax, despite having previously declined to reveal his contributions.
The celebrities also shared their reactions following the deaths of three people in a suspected hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship in the Atlantic Ocean.


