April 14, 2008

Vidal Sassoon: Anti-fascist warrior-hairdresser

Vidal Sassoon, the hairdresser, has recounted his early days as a foot-soldier for an underground anti-fascist group dedicated to wiping out Sir Oswald Mosley's far-Right movement after the Second World War.

Sassoon was a teenage member of the 43 Group, an organisation formed in 1946 by Jewish ex-servicemen who returned from the frontline only to discover that Mosley, the leader of the British Union of Fascists and an admirer of Adolf Hitler, was spreading his message of hatred on the streets of London.

The story is told in a BBC Radio 4 documentary, Archive Hour: A Rage In Dalston, to be broadcast on Saturday, April 19, at 8pm.

Mosley and his wife, Diana, one of the Mitford sisters, were interned during the war and released in 1943. His supporters continued to regard him as a hero and urged him to resume his political activities after the war, holding a series of public meetings in his name at which they spouted anti-Semitic propaganda.

The 43 Group was dedicated to breaking up meetings of these "Mosleyites", through violent means if necessary, and a 17-year-old Sassoon was an enthusiastic street-fighter.

The hairdresser, now 80, grew up in the East End and was a trainee at a London salon when he joined up. He told the programme how he once turned up to work with a black eye after a night of fighting.

"I'll never forget one morning I walked in and I had a hell of a bruise - it had been a difficult night the night before - and a client said to me, 'Good God, Vidal, what happened to your face?' And I said, 'Oh, nothing, madam, I just fell over a hairpin'."

Sassoon said of his fellow 43 Group members: "I was 17, these were all ex-servicemen at least five or six years older than me, and many of them won medals. I was a private."

Armed with knives and razor blades, the group fought pitched battles with Mosley supporters - many confrontations taking place in Ridley Road, Hackney, east London, which had a large Jewish community. The group disbanded in 1950.

Telegraph

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Respect to the Sassoon.

Anonymous said...

I beat that when Vidal Sassoon caught up with the fash, he pinned to them to the floor and gave them a bad haircut – after all, fascism is a crime against fashion.

Anonymous said...

Hairdressers are tough guys just like anyone else. Well done, mate, for snipping away the Hitlerite traitor's supporters with street-fighting grit.

Bet Nick Griffin's Mosleyite BNP wouldn't touch his hairdressing products with a bargepole.

Anonymous said...

Hairdressers are tough guys just like anyone else.

Are you a hairdresser too??? You don't have to compensate by beating up fascist dickheads .... LOL

Anonymous said...

Sassoon wrote the preface to Morris Beckman's book on post-war anti-fascism, 'The 43 Group'. It's still available from Bookmarks in London and on the wbe.