Photographer Jurgen Schadeberg (1931-2020) spent most of his life documenting the wrestle in opposition to apartheid. Years earlier than his demise in 2020, Schadeberg shared a few of his iconic pictures – and the tales behind them – with Al Jazeera.
On April 27, 1994, South Africa held its first multiracial democratic election, voting out apartheid and voting in its first Black president, Nelson Mandela.
Forty-six years prior, in 1948, apartheid – a system constructed on white supremacy, segregation and inequality – was signed into regulation.
It fomented the boundaries between races, reducing folks off from each other with more and more restrictive guidelines.
Within the vibrant multiracial enclaves of Johannesburg within the Fifties, apartheid police clamped down whereas many non-white folks resisted.
Amongst these documenting life and resistance underneath apartheid for the famed Drum journal, was younger German-born photographer Jurgen Schadeberg.
On the streets of Johannesburg, he captured vibrant, various communities at a time when the apartheid authorities was attempting its hardest to take away each hint of multiracialism from its streets. By his lens, he additionally immortalised main wrestle and cultural icons, amongst them Oliver Tambo, Miriam Makeba and Nelson Mandela himself.
This story was first printed within the Al Jazeera Digital Journal.