The Citizen (KZN)

Hamba kahle ‘Bra Peter’

VETERAN PHOTOGRAPH­ER REMEMBERED AT MOVING SERVICE

- Brian Sokutu – brians@citizen.co.za.

Family, friends, former colleagues and politician­s look back on his career.

Afinal salute of clicking cameras around his coffin, clapping to a classic jazz tune by music legend Abigail Kubeka, a collage of June 1976 Soweto photograph­s and moving eulogies – these moments marked the sendoff for acclaimed press photograph­er Dr Peter Magubane yesterday.

The veteran lensman – who was fondly known as “Bra Peter” and renowned for decades of using his camera to document and fight apartheid – was remembered fondly at his funeral service.

Amid the sound of heavy rain on the roof of the Bryanston Methodist Church, a sombre atmosphere gripped the emotion-charged service with speakers – from Magubane’s grandchild­ren and former colleagues, to President Cyril Ramaphosa – sharing anecdotes about the 91 year old who was laid to rest at the Fourways Memorial Park Cemetery yesterday.

A thorn in the flesh of the apartheid government, Magubane documented South Africa’s history from apartheid to democracy.

His pictures were witness to some of the defining moments in SA’s history. They earned him worldwide accolades amid the wrath of state repression, police beatings, detentions at home and being shot 17 times.

In paying tribute to Magubane, speakers remembered the tactics he used to evade police detection to take photos of incidents exposing apartheid’s injustices.

These included making use of a bread loaf, the internal pages of the Bible and dressing up like a tramp.

“Nothing could dissuade my father from getting his pictures,” said his daughter Fikile Magubane. “He used all kinds of tricks to disguise himself from being detected by police – he was a renegade.

“I remember when he disguised himself as a neglected old man. We were on our way to join a student demonstrat­ion in

Pretoria in 1976 when we were stopped by police in Casspirs (four-wheeled, apartheid-era anti-riot vehicles) between Orlando East and Noodgesig.

“We saw police handling an old man and forcing him into the Casspir to remove the many layers of clothes on his body.

“When I cast my eyes downwards to his shoes, I saw that they were my father’s shoes.

“No-one seemed to recognise the old man except me. I had to hold myself back, to avoid blowing his cover, although I was terrified about what they would do to him.

“When they eventually found his camera under the many layers of clothing, they took his film.”

Former president Thabo Mbeki and his wife Zanele said Magubane would be remembered as “an outstandin­g patriot, a liberation fighter who chronicled our history and struggle”.

SA Council of Churches general secretary Bishop Malusi Mpumlwana said: “Justice and righteousn­ess are some of the attributes of God. Two of these accentuate­d by Peter Magubane were love and creativity.”

Said Ramaphosa: “At a time when an unjust regime acted with impunity and callous disregard for human life, Peter Magubane’s images exposed its lies.

“The apartheid regime did not care much for the lives it was extinguish­ing, but it cared a great deal about its image – especially about how it was portrayed to the rest of the world.

“Peter Magubane’s images and those of his peers, upended Hendrik Verwoerd’s great lie that apartheid was benign benevolenc­e – a system of the separate but equal and so-called good neighbourl­iness.”

Magubane’s images ... upended Hendrik Verwoerd’s lie that apartheid was benign benevolenc­e

President Cyril Ramaphosa

 ?? Picture: Michel Bega ?? LAST RESPECTS. Mourners gather to pay tribute to renowned photojourn­alist Peter Magubane at his funeral service at the Bryanston Methodist Church in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.
Picture: Michel Bega LAST RESPECTS. Mourners gather to pay tribute to renowned photojourn­alist Peter Magubane at his funeral service at the Bryanston Methodist Church in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.

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