Tag Archives: zimbabwe

18 with a plane ticket

Like a sneaky fugitive I managed to skip away from the clutches of the encroaching arms of the security forces by boarding a flight in Salisbury to London, via Lisbon, on a TAP flight, in April 1973. I remember seeing the shiny boots of a Police Officer at the airport and then to my horror realized that they belonged to a former school colleague from just three months before, whose name I can still remember, a white farmer’s son called Ian Darby. I managed to sneak around him as I had an irrational fear that he would have stopped me boarding that plane. 

This was Rhodesia just as the guerrilla war for independence was hotting up and I knew I wanted to play no part in that by fighting for the continuation of white supremacy under the Ian Smith regime.  I was just 18 and had recently left school with three low grade ‘A’ levels in History, English and Geography. Just two weeks later an army detail visited my parents house in Salisbury, (now Harare) looking for me to be conscripted immediately. It was a narrow escape. My Mum told them “You’re too late, he’s gone.” They left disappointed. My compass was pulling me strongly towards the UK.

London was an exciting place to land, it was April and much cooler than I was expecting, I really didn’t have the right clothes for an English spring. Somewhere near Shepherd’s Bush I spent my first couple of weeks, staying with an aunt. My sister Jane was around too and I clearly remember her taking me to my first London gig, in a pub nearby with South African jazzman Dudu Pukwana supported by maverick sax player Lol Coxhill. I felt free for perhaps the first time as an adult.  The next day I was introduced to the film work of Jacques Tati and his automobile and his world of visual humour – Trafic. Life had begun in a new place and there was a new exciting world to discover. To be continued…

George's cousin

While visiting Zimbabwe in 1986 I travelled to the Domboshawa district with a few people I had recently met in Harare, amongst them was George, who had fought in the guerrilla war to dislodge the previous regime, but was now a dreadlocked musician in the vein of Thomas Mapfumo.
We visited some members of his extended family in this very rural area and here we found his cousin, who picked up his home made guitar and knocked out a few tunes in the hut, which had no windows, the only light came in through a crack in the door. Others came to shake maracas and dance, but he was the one I focused on sitting next to the pile of lime sacks. These two were for me the pick of the session. It was a joyful and entertaining hour.

The day I met Fidel

I captured this informal shot of Fidel Castro, then El Presidente, between meetings at the conference centre in Harare, Zimbabwe in August 1986 where 90 odd heads of state from the Non-Aligned Movement gathered to discuss important matters, like how to deal with apartheid South Africa. He subsequently launched into a two hour speech in Spanish, the gist of which I’m sure had an anti capitalist theme running through it. We didn’t have much of a conversation, my Spanish was quite limited at the time, but he did agree to let me take the picture and several others.