It was humbling to see President Jacob Zuma mentioning and
acknowledging the presence of Sam Nzima in Parliament during his State of the Nation Address earlier
in February this year. While I commend this wonderful gesture,
let me point out that I believe Nzima is not being given all the credit that is
rightfully his. On that note, I believe that it is high time that we, the
people of Bushbuckridge and Mpumalanga as a whole, push for the recognition of
our hero, Nzima, the man who took the 16 June 1976 photo of the dying Hector
Pieterson. Although that photograph received a round of applause for
exposing the brutality of the apartheid police and shocked the entire world, it
also saw an abrupt end to the career of the man behind the lens.
What many people do not know is that Nzima
had to retire his camera due to the implications that came with the publishing
of the most famous photo in the history of our Struggle. This man remains
an unsung hero despite having captured the photo that played a huge role in
turning around the political misfortunes of this beautiful country.
Nzima snapped an image that helped in shaping the political
landscape of the country and unconsciously contributed to the fall of the apartheid
regime. However, this hero is not receiving all the honour that is due to him.
The only time he ever gets mentioned is when he is referred to as “the man who captured
the June 16 photo” and nothing more.
It is self-evident that we may not have known about Hector
Pieterson had it not been for Nzima. There would not be Hector Pieterson
Memorial in Soweto today if it was not for this brave man who risked it all to
capture what turned out to be the most important image of the Soweto Uprising.
The doors of freedom that were opened due to that picture,
and the attention and sympathy that South Africa received from the
international community because of that photo, definitely had an impact on the
freedom that we are enjoying today.
However, it is so sad that Nzima is not even involved in the
Hector Pieterson Memorial despite being the indirect influence behind the photo
that ensured the establishment of this monument. It is so touching that this
man’s great deeds are going unnoticed and no one is doing anything about it. It hurts so good to realise that not even a single author has volunteered to pen a biography
about this man’s life. Why? I don’t know. I really don't know.
Perhaps Nzima is not visible enough. But the man really
deserves recognition. He is our hero and that should not be taken away from
him. There should at least be a place, road, building, street or an off-ramp somewhere in
the country named after this man in honour of his contribution to society.
It goes without saying that Nzima is a hero and all heroes
should be recognised for their positive contribution regardless of their
geographical setting, ethnicity, race, gender or any form of classification. In the meantime, I just have to keep my fingers crossed and hope that something be done.