Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/12/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Shooting at f1? Earlier this year I was on the way back to Yangon (Rangoon) on a ferry at night. There were a lot of construction workers on the boat. Three of them were laikin' about (fooling around). I pointed at the M6 and Nocti in my hand and gave my ususal open-eyed 'may I use it?' expression. They consented, laughing, and carried on as before. After a while they decided it was time for a formal portrait, so they lined up along the railing, but were disappointed to find I had no flash. I had already taken a couple of snaps (f1, an eighth, EPJ (320T) pushed one - work out how much light that is!) before one of them took my arm and dragged me across to a 4 ft fluoro tube, explaining that there wasn't enough light anywhere else. I was touched by their concerned offer of advice and assistance, and grateful for the opportunity to accept it with thanks. Apart from the M6 and Nocti, I was carrying a 35 'lux asph, a 50 'cron and a 75 'lux, as well as a Minolta Spotmeter and Colormeter. It struck me that it would have taken 200 years of one of those guy's entire wages to buy that lot. The Burmese are gracious, charming and friendly, despite the poverty and oppression. More than ever before I wondered what the hell I was doing there, what right I had to fly in to their country, take some photos of them and their religious places (no matter how 'sensitive' I might hope to be and how much respect I have for the agency) then fly back out. I flew back to a world of crass materialism and loneliness with my photo of three laughing guys who knew something I didn't. I resolved to stay in the places I am invited to (most of the time anyway - see footnote) and the country I was born in. Thank goodness some Burmese people asked me back. Malcolm Singapore footnote: Except if I intend to do harm. Someone said that the documentarian's fundamental responsibility is to do no-one harm unintentionally.