While the world watched in horror at the news of a bombing at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England on Monday evening, ordinary Mancunians jumped in to do whatever they could to assist the survivors of the attack. There were dozens of stories of hotels taking in stranded children, adults helping to lead scared concertgoers to safety, and taxi drivers driving people home for free. These are all incredibly inspiring stories, and are nice reminders that even in the midst of unspeakable horror, some sort of "good" can emerge.

And then there's this (now-deleted) tweet, from Cosmopolitan: "Muslim Taxi Drivers Took Kids Trying to Escape the Manchester Ariana Grande Concert Home For Free"...with a picture of a man who is actually a Sikh.

And boy, were people not thrilled.

@Cosmopolitan You need to change this ASAP. This man is Sikh. You are misinforming MILLIONS. pic.twitter.com/Tp7ohIryTl — SikhPressAssociation (@SikhPA) May 23, 2017

@mylantorres_ @Cosmopolitan If you can't identify correctly the faith of this person, why post it? He is not Muslim, he is Sikh — Bhupinder S. Hundal (@BhupinderHundal) May 23, 2017

@Cosmopolitan He's a Sikh, not a Muslim. Please do your job better! — Amrita Bhinder (@amritabhinder) May 23, 2017

@Cosmopolitan The photo is a little misleading. That taxi driver is Sikh — letsgolakers086 (@letsgolakers086) May 23, 2017

@Cosmopolitan You are just pushing a lefts agenda this man is NOT Muslim — Ava (@itsmeavaz) May 23, 2017

@Cosmopolitan This man is a Sikh. Not a Muslim. Didn't expect you to wrongly identify a Sikh. Have some shame and get your facts checked — NoToSilence (@akdwaaz) May 23, 2017

Still, questions remained as to why the man was described as a Muslim when he had previously been identified as a Sikh by other outlets. (Further, he's wearing a turban and beard, which are rather obvious indicators of his religion.)

Hey @Cosmopolitan - why did you describe this guy as a Muslim when you knew he was a Sikh? pic.twitter.com/zm7kRRQaCJ — Paul Joseph Watson (@PrisonPlanet) May 23, 2017

It's wonderful that taxi drivers stepped up to do the decent thing in a horrible situation. It's not entirely necessary to single out taxi drivers of a certain religious belief--one would hope that human charity would be a universal concept.