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Neo-Nazi leader Colin Jordan's legacy

The long-time anti-fascist campaigner is glad to see the back of the neo-Nazi leader Colin Jordan, who died earlier this month, but warns that his influence and racist ideology lives on in the activities of today’s far-right extremists

April 22, 2009 17:47
Colin Jordan (holding raincoat), his wife Françoise and supporters give a Nazi salute outside Marylebone Magistrates’ Court in 1963

By

Gerry Gable

4 min read

Colin Jordan, who died this month aged 85, never escaped the margins of the British extreme right and never had more than a few hundred followers in any of the parties he led. Yet the tradition he represented remains an important influence on today’s British National Party.

The high point of Jordan’s career as a political leader was when he mounted the platform at the National Socialist rally he had organised in Trafalgar Square on 1 July, 1962. Behind him, a massive banner bore the words “Free Britain From Jewish Control” and “Britain Awake”, echoing the slogans of Hitler’s Third Reich.

Wearing the uniform of his National Socialist Movement’s (NSM) paramilitary force Spearhead — brown shirt, military boots and pagan sunwheel symbol armband — he spat abuse at some 5,000 people in the square. Only around 800 were neo-Nazis, attracted by the NSM’s hatred for Jews and democracy. There were also some 4,200 opponents, of whom I was one.

By the time the police intervened to arrest the speakers, a riot was under way. Many of the neo-Nazis were injured.