Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/02/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Spent the early part of the evening watching the shattering film Hotel Rwanda. The first thing I did when I got home was to put John Coltrane?s A Love Supreme on the stereo. The second thing that I did was to pour a stiff drink. As you know, Hotel Rwanda concerns the 1994 genocide in which perhaps 800,000 men, women, and children lost their lives. The movie revolves around the actions Paul Rusesabagina, an ordinary man who acted with extraordinary courage to save the lives of over 1,000 people. Always in the background is the catastrophic moral failure of the international community to intervene to stop the killing--to honor, in any way, the United Nations Convention on Genocide. When I left the theater, I glad to see students from my university handing out leaflets, drawing movie-goers? attention to the way in which the world has, today, similarly failed to act to stop the killing in Darfur, Sudan (which if not yet genocide is surely on its way to being genocide). All this naturally reminded me of the photos that Nathan showed us last week, photos of a world that disappeared. Such was my frame of mind an hour or so ago, when I opened the book that I plucked off a shelf in a used bookstore the other day--Sports Shots: Dr. Paul Wolff?s Leica, published in 1937 by William Morrow & Co. The event is the Berlin Olympics of 1936, and the photos encompass nearly everything from the lighting of the torch in Greece to the final ceremony. The book is admirable in many ways. The photography is varied, creative, always good, and often stunning. Wolff contributes an essay describing the way the he and his assistant managed the events and the equipment that they used--from an Elmar 2.8cm to a Telyt 20cm. But, of course, the 1936 Olympics was no ordinary Olympics. The very first image shows the great African-American athlete Jesse Owens in the long jump. Owens won four gold medals, becoming, in the process, a symbol of black pride and achievement. The seventh image shows the Brandenburg Gate at night, with banners hanging from it, illuminated by spotlights. On two of the banners are the Olympic rings. On three of them is the swastika. The twelfth image shows the multitudes in Olympic stadium turning toward the Olympic flame and raising their arms in the Nazi salute. The thirteenth image show Spiridon Luis, the 1896 marathon winner, presenting an olive branch to Adolph Hitler. I had to close the book for a minute. In 1936 nobody could have imaged what was to come. In 2005 we know what?s happening in Darfur. I have to ask myself what I?m doing about it. I?ve written letters to my president, my senators, and my congressmen. I?ve spoken at a teach-in. And now I?m haranguing you. --John (BTW, I have no reason to believe that Paul Wolff was a Nazi, an anti-Semite, or a racist. In fact, among the photos in the book are very respectful photos of Asians and Africans and one of Jesse Owens and the German long-jumper Luz Long, sharing what seems to be a moment of genuine friendship.) J Mason Charlottesville, Virginia __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? The all-new My Yahoo! - What will yours do? http://my.yahoo.com