Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/01/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Leica is a religion. One thing that brings me infinite amusement is history. I did my undergrad in early medieval history, and just remembered many nights of Latin readings for my thesis. My thesis was on the Donatist controversy, which was an internal persecution in North Africa based on who was a "real" Christian, i.e. who had been persecuted. Let me translate the story into terms familiar to this group. I'll take a little liberty to fit our facts. Once upon a time, there was an asthmatic lens designer known as Oskar Barnack. Oskar, for whatever reason, decided that it was time for a change. One of his favorite expressions was "for what good is it to have the image quality if you lose the image" or some such thing. He suggested to the establishment that maybe there was a better way of doing things. He created a technologically-sophisticated camera that was easy to use. And it was convenient. His followers were persecuted, but they kept the faith while the mighty Zeiss empire rolled on. Barnack's cameras were eventually legalized. After the Great War, his church brought out a new model, known as the M3 (clearly because it was 3 cameras in one body - one for a 50mm lens, one for a 90 and one for a 135). His followers initially despised it, saying that it was inferior to the old one, and who needed lever wind or a combined finder? But new adherents latched onto the more liberal religion. As time went on, the resistance faded and everyone fell in line. (1968). At about the same time, competing cults known as Canon and Nikon began to attract the followers of Barnack. They made it easy, making lenses for Leicas first and then slowly easing them into full indoctrination with bodies. The Church of Barnack tried hard to adjust its dogma, and it upgraded from the M4 to the M5. But to no avail. The M5 was flogged and executed. The establishment began persecuting again. The number of followers dwindled. Canon and Nikon gained more followers by encouraging the "lazy man's way). It was a dark day, and the Church went into exile, shipping all of the tooling to Canada. (1970s). Eventually, the dark days of the persecution ended. The M4-P was in production and the church was regaining some of its lost members. Some were unsure about their souls, and especially unsure about the stamped top covers. Things went relatively well until the M-6, when the Pax Wetzlarensis came crashing to a halt. Suddenly, the Church was divided into two camps. One, the Church of the M-4, said that all automation was evil and that it's a slippery slope. "If you really care about *images*, you wouldn't need automation; only if you are persecuted by inconvenience are you a true follower; there is a certain pleasure in inconvenience." The M6 adherents retorted that a little automation was a good thing, and it was the spirit and not the letter of the law. As time went on, the M-4 people became more and more bitter, talking about the old days and how the cameras were better-made. They ultimately concluded that "good pictures come through suffering alone." They decided that the M6 and a subsequent prophet known as Hexar were false, and so they persecuted the two of them; they had decided that the true M-7)essiah would eventually come, and all the automation worth having would come from Leica itself. And here we are today. Cheers Dante