Defiance Fighting the Far Right: Who was Gurdip Singh Chaggar?

Published date08 April 2024
Publication titleMyLondon (England)
It captures the Battle for Brick Lane after the murder of Altab Ali, the Southall protests and the killing of Blair Peach by the police; the overlooked story of the killing of an entire British Asian family in Walthamstow

The series opens on the killing of 18-year-old Gurdip Singh Chaggar on the streets of West London. The shocking murder left Asians across the UK outraged as they took to the streets to protest.

What happened to Singh Chagger

During the summer of 1976, people quietly shuffled past a police cordon outside the Victory pub on Southall's busy high street.

Behind the tape was a pool of blood that had come from Gurdeep Singh Chaggar, an 18-year-old Sikh teenager who had been stabbed to death during a racist attack in the centre of the South Asian community in West London.

Gurdip was an 18-year-old turban-wearing Sikh male who was targeted in an unprovoked attack by a gang of white youths. The engineering student was out with friends when he was attacked by the group on the night of June 4.

The teenager's brutal death sent shockwaves across the town, which has slowly become home to the largest community of South Asians in London. The heightened emotions in 1976 led to a weekend of protests which saw hundreds of Asians voicing their anger against the killing.

However, "One down, one million to go", were the chilling words of a Far-Right leader John Kingsley Read,

The protests were predominantly peaceful and led to the creation of the Southall Youth Movement SYM -the biggest youth-led movement of anti-racism in...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT