Sunday Tribune

Ranjith Kally

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him because he learnt from overseas photograph­ers.

From taking pictures at social events, Kally did freelance work for the Leader Newspaper and then joined Golden City Post and Drum in 1956. He retired in the 1980s.

Taking pictures at private events was borne of his need to supplement his earnings as a worker at a shoe factory, where he spent 15 years. Kally’s family lived in a village in Reunion, near the old Durban Airport. His father was a Sardar (foreman) in a nearby sugar cane mill.

“I remember walking barefoot, for more than a mile-and-a-half, to school every day.

“Sometimes the front of my big toe would get badly gashed while walking on the cobbleston­e pathway. Often, the same injury would be aggravated a few days later, on the pathway. I can still feel that excruciati­ng pain when I think about it.”

His family’s financial difficulti­es forced him to find work after finishing Standard 6 (Grade 8).

Kally’s coverage of politics of yesteryear and courts is where he earned most prominence and trouble because he was prepared to push boundaries.

Once he smuggled a camera into court so he could snap the role players in a prominent murder matter.

“I got the judge, the seven accused, prosecutor and legal teams in one shot by wearing my camera under my shirt.

“While standing at the court’s entrance, I opened a shirt button to expose my Nikon’s wide-angled lens and took the picture.”

Kally said it was the most daring deed and was pleasantly surprised when “nobody batted an eyelid” at the published pictures.

“Not even the seven members of the notorious “Crimson League” gang, who stood accused in the dock.

“I was passionate about my job and overlooked risks to get pictures.”

But, on one occasion Kally had to bottle his passion for the job with haste and run for cover when a hitman for the Sallot gang confronted him about a picture he had shot.

“I don’t know where I got the energy from but I flew like dust out of there.”

With the publicatio­ns’ “open-minded” owner Jim Bailey running stories on apartheid atrocities, Kally said they had to “walk a thin line between police and political parties.

“It was very dangerous and I had to be very wary of Special Forces officers who watched our moves.”

Kally’s job got him to interact closely with prominent people like actors and entertaine­rs. He met Dr Chris Barnard shortly after his famous heart transplant. The doctor was hosted by members of the Orient Club in Isipingo.

Kally said his best memories and treasured pictures came from interactio­ns with politician­s like Monty Naicker, Yusuf Dadoo and Nelson Mandela, the three greats.

The three were also among the accused during the Rivonia Treason Trial (196364), which Kally attended.

“Dr Kesaveloo Goonam was an unsung hero, she didn’t give a damn what people thought. Fatima Meer was another I respected.

“But Albert Luthuli, he was my man. I loved taking his picture. When he received his Nobel Peace Prize, my picture was used globally.

The reporter Kally enjoyed working with the most was Bobby Harripersa­dh.

“Bobby was a wangler of note. He could make difficult people talk.”

The added benefit for Kally working with Harripersa­dh was he met the journalist’s sister, Leela, who he later married.

Kally said, in his day, taking pictures was an art because there were many factors to consider before attempting to capture the perfect shot. He frowned on how easy it is to take pictures these days.

“Even a child can take good pictures with the equipment available. In my time you had to think through a picture before you shot.”

With the Post and Drum being weekly and monthly publicatio­ns respective­ly, Kally took his pictures in a way that kept them fresh.

Kally’s photos stood the test of time and remain relevant. Some of his work is contained in the two books he published, The Struggle, 60 Years in Focus in 2004, and Memory Against Forgetting in 2014.

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