Saturday Star

Faces of courage and resilience

- TANYA WATERWORTH tanya.waterworth@inl.co.za

SHARING their journey with cancer, 42 South African women have told their stories to the world in a new coffee table book, Resilience, which has been launched globally.

The free-to-download book is by renowned photograph­er and businessma­n Ramzi Mansour, in collaborat­ion with his wife Nicole, who is an integral coach with an extensive background in media.

Speaking to the Independen­t on Saturday this week, Nicole said the book was her husband’s brainchild.

“He had been looking at his photograph­s and felt there was a calling to do more, to take it one step further and get involved in something meaningful. Most of Ramzi’s portraits are women and he wanted to photograph real women and tell a story with his portraits.

“When Ramzi was much younger, his father had cancer and it was a brutal journey, but he survived and is still here with us today,” said Nicole.

The couple, who are based in Cape Town, worked on the book for the past two years, gathering stories of courage and hope.

“We worked in parallel, Ramzi worked on the shoots and I worked on the interviews. It was imperative for him not to have a pretty picture, but to hear their stories and capture the emotion.”

She said that while many of the women who were interviewe­d had been diagnosed with breast cancer, other cancers were included. “We all know someone who has had cancer and this book took time. There was a big responsibi­lity when I was doing the interviews, which is close to my role as a coach, and to hear what the person is saying, empathise and validate. I was really inspired and living the experience with them.

“I was just blown away by what they went through and how they got through it. The overwhelmi­ng feeling was this awe at what the human spirit is capable of during times of adversity, not only to survive but to thrive.

“It makes me feel really connected to all human beings, it makes you feel not alone and how to approach things differentl­y. It’s such a human story and we have made it accessible to everybody,” said Nicole, adding that all those involved with the production of the book had done so pro bono and it had been a collaborat­ive team effort.

The women in the book are from across South Africa and only first names were used. Because the book has a global reach, each story is not defined by a locality, but created a sensitive space for each woman to tell her story.

The foreword is by eminent oncologist Dr Peter Harper, medical oncologist and lead consultant at Guy’s, King’s and St Thomas hospitals in London.

Harper writes: “This book charts that journey in a way that offers each of us renewed hope in the human spirit. Ramzi Mansour’s portraits are strong and beautiful, capturing as they do the individual character and spirit of each one of these extraordin­ary women who has stared into the unknown and then made that journey back to the light with their dignity intact, and a determinat­ion that life itself should take on a new and different meaning. Nicole Mansour has curated every story. Each one is different, and every story fits a different facet of us all. These brave women take us through their stories.”

To download Resilience, go to resilience­book.org

 ?? ?? LINDIWE is one of 42 women to share the story of her battle with cancer.
| RAMZI MANSOUR
LINDIWE is one of 42 women to share the story of her battle with cancer. | RAMZI MANSOUR

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