on 02 Dec 1998 11:35 ||||||||Sa\|||m wrote:
Culture - for me - is everywhere. I am particularly interested in groups of people who are making noise and are perceived as a problem to the establishment. These groups exist throughout the world - and the internet has become an invaluable tool for enabling these like-minded groups - these groups that share the same culture - to exchange their stories, develop relationships and implement strategies.
Dear SAM,
I feel a bit embarrassed by the fact that I am writing a lot while others are silent, but as I promised or offered to be enthusiastic about this, I will see how long this lasts.. anyway, here is my response to your comment. It comes in the form of a most thoughtful obituary written by my friend Shahidul Alam from Bangladesh. You wil find that it needs a very minimal introduction, and in reading it in detail you will discover how it touches on so many of your questions.
All best to you
Pedro Meyer
When the Mind Says Yes
by Shahidul Alam
It was in the foothills of the Himalayas that he was born. In a bullock
cart amidst a snowstorm. It was in the cold chill of January, in the
severest winter in BangladeshÕs memory, that he died. Alone and uncared
for, the frail old man shrunken with age, but with a heart as wide as the
ocean, and a mind as young as the children that he loved, Golam Kasem,
nicknamed Daddy, died at the tender age of 104. The single storied yellow
building at 73 Indira Road, with its unkempt garden, was home not only to
BangladeshÕs oldest photographer, but also the first Bengali Muslim short
story writer.
Born on the 5th November 1894, Daddy lost his mother shortly after birth.
Brought up by his aunt, the young man took up photography the way many
young men take up many things, to impress a young girl. She had promised
to cook for him if he could develop a film that others had failed with.
Kasem embarked with the same trait for disciplined research, that he
maintained till his death. He went round the studios of Mednapur to find
out the method that would win him his meal. He never talked of what the
meal was like, but did describe how he used a hardner to prevent the
emulsion from peeling off. Saving his bus fare to school to buy a brownie
camera, he began taking photographs of the things he loved most, animals,
flowers and children. And importantly, he preserved those negatives. In
his archives, amidst old paper sachets marked in his neat handwriting are
glass plates dating back to 1918. The harbour in Calcutta, early steam
engines, the Gurkha regiment in shorts, and many many portraits. Period
pieces lit in that soft natural light that early studios used. Grainless
negatives of people, generally in studied poses. His spontaneous pictures
were those of animals and children, and amongst them are some gems. "Her
first dance" is a delicate photograph of a child amidst a twirl, centre
stage with her family as an audience. Strong portraits of his friend a
teacher and the calm portrait of his grandmother belie the fact that he
was an amateur, who took photographs for fun. He sold his first
photograph at the age of 98, for Drik's 1993 calendar.
The founder of the Camera Recreation Club, Daddy arranged regular
meetings at his house in Indira Road where the club was housed. Regular
visitors included poet Sufia Kamal, painter Qamrul Hassan and
photographer Manzoor Alam Beg. His letters were hand-written, each one
numbered, and the envelopes often made of recycled newspapers or book
wrappings. Competitions at the Camera Recreation Club were unusual
events. Photographers who would abstain from many local competitions
would submit those small 4" x 5" prints. And they were proud of the
simple prizes they sometimes won. The prize giving was always accompanied
by a cultural programme. And Daddy would always sing.
The room next to his bedroom was his darkroom. A red plastic bowl stuck
under a light bulb, his safe light. He mixed his own chemicals from old
tins of chemicals. Often I would get a SOS. The same neat handwriting,
asking for potassium ferricyanide or some other chemical that he needed
for his latest experiment. Photography was his passion. Once at a meeting
at the Bangladesh Photographic Society (BPS), where he had been presented
a new camera, Daddy spoke of how the camera he had been given would be
much more than a machine to him. He talked of how he kept his camera next
to his pillow when he went to sleep. How, when he was sad, he would speak
to it, and that it would talk back and comfort him. Unimpressed by the
modern motor driven models, his preference was for a simple manual SLR,
"preferably not too heavy" he would add with a mischievous smile. That is
not to say he was shy of technology. I remember him holding up his thick
glasses to read his first Email from his grandson in Canada. He asked me
to come back the next day, and as I parked my bicycle by his rose garden,
he was ready with his answer, again written in his neat handwriting. He
was fascinated by Email and used it regularly, and curious about how the
message would get through the ether.
He was fiercely independent. He cooked his own meals, fed his dog and his
cats and did his own shopping. Until recently, he would even go on his
own to a house down the road and guide himself up the stairs to meet a
lady friend whom he occasionally visited. Rarely would he talk of
himself and it was only in passing conversation with the late Mr
Nasiruddin that I discovered that Daddy was the first Bengali Muslim
short story writer. He used to write regularly for Shawgat, and continued
to write, both technical articles on photography for the BPS newsletter,
and short stories for general publication. His last manuscript, a simple
manual on photography, sadly lies in my hands, unpublished. He had dearly
wanted it printed before he died. The proofing was complete, the
photographs selected, but Ômatters of consequenceÕ allowed other projects
to take precedence. His last note, urging me on with the publication,
will forever haunt me.
Always articulate, on his 100th birthday, at the opening of a joint
photographic exhibition by him and the other photographic guru Manzoor
Alam Beg at the Drik Gallery, he talked eloquently of how photography was
the way for people of the world to make friends, to break barriers, to
discover one another. Later as the chief guest at the opening of the 1996
World Press Photo, he talked of his own struggle to overcome the
limitations of an ageing body. "My body says no, but my mind says you
must, and in the end it is the mind that wins." On Friday the 9th January
1998, the body finally said no and the mind took wings.
-------------------------------
Pedro Meyer
Ortega # 20, Coyoacán, 04000
México D.F. México
tel (525) 554 3996
tel (525) 554 3730
fax (525) 659 0872
email: pedro@zonezero.com