home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1993
/
TIME Almanac 1993.iso
/
time
/
022690
/
0226680.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-08-28
|
2KB
|
49 lines
FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
When Nelson Mandela stepped through the gates of Victor
Verster Prison Farm last week, TIME's Peter Magubane was on hand
to photograph the moment. The two men would not have the
opportunity to embrace until two days later, however, when
Magubane would be called to a secret location on Mandela's first
day back in Johannesburg. "I wasn't taking pictures," Magubane
says. "I said, `You look quite good. You haven't changed.' It
was a relief to see him out of prison." Two nights later, the
two men, who have known each other nearly 40 years, shared a
chicken curry dinner in Mandela's Soweto home.
Throughout his 35-year career, Magubane, 58, has been on
hand for most of South Africa's historic moments. He
photographed Mandela's Rivonia trial in 1964 and covered the
1960 Sharpeville massacre, which claimed the lives of 69 blacks.
"I had never seen so many dead people," he recalls. Later, his
editor would chide him for hanging back from the bloodshed and
not taking any close-ups. "From that day," he says, "I decided
I was not going to get emotionally involved, or at least not
until after I have done my work."
In the course of his work, Magubane has frequently felt the
brutality of the apartheid laws. He has been arrested several
times, was once detained in solitary confinement for 586 days
and was also banned for five years, which meant he was
prohibited from being with more than one other person at a time
and required to report to a police station once a week. From
1969 to 1975, Magubane was forced to quit journalism because of
the restrictions imposed by the government.
Magubane's touching photograph of Mandela hugging a
grandchild appears in this week's issue. But as far as Mandela
is concerned, the most important picture Magubane took last week
is a small black-and-white head shot. Informed that Mandela
wanted to apply for a passport in case he was called to African
National Congress headquarters in Zambia, Magubane obliged by
shooting a roll of black-and-white film and having it developed
overnight. The next day Mandela's lawyer showed up to take
Magubane's photographs to the passport office in Johannesburg.
-- Louis A. Weil III