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- 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
-
-
-