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In the league of distinguished lensmen

ON THE eve of South Africa’s advent into a democratic dispensation in 1994, people raised alarm regarding my being a photojournalist.  They deemed it a dangerous career choice!

As the country edged toward April 27 and two photographers, Abdul Sharif and Ken Oosterbroek, perished whilst out news gathering – their concerns accentuated.

Ahead of the watershed elections, Oosterbroek had recruited me onto The Star newspaper’s photographic department and a few weeks later, he was killed in conflict-ridden Thokoza.  The tragedy marked the genesis of my foray into the exhilarating world of the imagery.

I was taking off at precisely the opportune period to be in the news media industry, exposed to the who’s-who of Planet Earth – including fellow lensmen! 

This is a chronicle of distinguished photographers I crossed paths with.

In 1993, Life magazine legend, Alfred Eisenstaedt – recognizable for his VJ Day Times Square image depicting a sailor (named George Mendonsa) in black uniform spontaneously kissing a dental assistant (named Greta Friedman) in a contrasting white dress on a teeming Times Square whilst celebrating Japan’s surrender in World War II – held his retrospective exhibition at the Johannesburg Art Gallery, where I was in attendance and requested a souvenir with the elderly American.

Pending my very first experience of conflict coverage, the so-called Shell House Massacre – I came across the white-haired Time magazine stringer, Peter Magubane, for the first time. Still inexperienced – I beheld him photographing the body of an Inkatha member lying on a street.

(Mawela recorded with Jurgen Schadeberg on the occasion of latters’ retrospective photographic exhibition at Jhb Art Gallery).

A couple of years on, Eisenstaedt’s fellow American and Life magazine snapper, Gordon Parks – whose image titled, American Gothic, of a Black American worker (named Ella Watson) whom he pictured holding a broom and a mop against the backdrop of an American flag, stirred controversy – also paid a visit to Joburg, where I got to engage with the Blaxploitation exponent.

On The Star, the affable Alf Kumalo – then a personal friend of Nelson Mandela and Muhammad Ali – took a liking to me, enough to share tales with me such as the one involving thugs chasing police out of Fietas!  Demonstrating the incident whilst walking with me along Sauer Street – Kumalo was such an animated sight!

Inside the jacket cover of the 2017 published tome, is a glossy image of a blonde man holding a Leica camera at a vertical angle seemingly poised to snap a subject. The man is German-born photographer, Jurgen Schadeberg, and the book is his memoir, The Way I See It – whilst the image was recorded by none other than myself!

(Alf Kumalo, Richard Maponya and Peter Magubane recorded pending the showing of a documentary on Nelson Mandela, at the Maponya Mall Ster Kinekor Theatre).

I regard the feat a feather in my fedora, considering that Schadeberg’s monochromatic oeuvre of 1950s Sophiatown compelled me to delve into photography!

Later, having segued into the 21th Century, I heard Sam Nzima – the man who recorded the image synonymous with June 16, 1976 Students Uprisings – ‘admonishing’ me to not be so generous on the shutter whilst I was clicking away on my Canon digital SLR at a Maponya Mall event on May 24, 2009. 

All images Jacob MAWELA (Mawela pictured alongside American photographer Gordon Parks, during the Shaft’s creator’s visiting work to Johannesburg).

(Mawela recorded in the company of Peter Magubane and Sam Nzima at the conclusion of Alf Kumalo’s funeral service at Bryanston).

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