AMARAH, Iraq — She’s southern
Iraq’s
celebrity photographer, a former political prisoner who has spent more than 60
years behind the lens documenting people and places and defying convention.
اضافة اعلان
Samira Mazaal is 77 and still going strong more than
half a century after turning to photography to feed her family — because she
had no choice.
“Peasants, intellectuals, I’ve photographed them
all,” said the mother of two, her black hijab framing a face lined by life.
“I have photographed Amarah in all its beauty — I
went deep into the marshes,” to the south of the city in the floodplain of the
Tigris and Euphrates rivers.
Everyone in the area turns to Studio Samira, be it
for a passport photograph or to have a couple’s portrait taken ahead of their
wedding.
She tells how she became the first female
photographer in Maysan province aged just 16, despite familial conventions that
ruled in the Iraq of the 1960s, and also how political activism led to
imprisonment and torture.
“My family has never known any other business —
we’re all photographers,” Mazaal said.
Framed photographs lining the walls bear witness to
her trade, in both black and white or in colors faded by time.
She has albums of images showing Iraq as it used to
be: black-clad women carrying huge bales balanced on their heads; a smiling
peasant woman in a flowery dress, her hair braided, standing near a cow; a
mother and child filling a pot with water from the river.
‘Society can be cruel’
Mazaal’s father was among
the first to introduce photography to the province.
“I asked him to initiate me into the craft, but he
said: ‘No, you’re too young. You can’t — society can be cruel’,” she recalls.
But soon circumstances would force him to change his
mind. He was rendered blind in a botched operation, and could no longer provide
for his family.
So Mazaal had to step in.
She started off using the daguerreotype method of
the 1800s that uses silver-plated copper sheets, but then her father sold off
some land so she could buy more modern equipment.
“My studio became extraordinarily successful,” she
smiles. “Because I was a young woman, I could take pictures of families.”
Mazaal exploited the norms of a conservative
society: the male heads of households preferred that a woman photographer, not
a man, take the pictures of their wives and daughters.
Bassem Al-Subaid is one satisfied client of Studio
Samira.
“There isn’t a single household in all of Maysan
province that doesn’t know Samira the photographer,” he tells AFP.
“My generation got
to know Samira when we came to be photographed by her,” adds the man in his
forties. “It was the previous generation that saw her political activism.”
In 1963, Iraq was being torn apart by revolutions
and bloody crackdowns, and the then adolescent had no idea that a communist
tract would put her behind bars.
A source of pride
After General Abdel Salam
Aref took power in a Baath party coup, three
militants came to Mazaal’s studio and asked her to mass-produce a poster
denouncing the new regime.
She accepts that she had not yet completely formed
her own political opinions, and was swayed at the time by her brother’s
sympathies.
“In all of Amarah, there wasn’t a single wall
without a pasted copy of the poster,” she boasts. “It wasn’t a crime — it’s a
source of pride.”
A picture of herself, which she still has today,
made her famous. It shows her lying on a hospital bed after being tortured in a
building in Amarah.
“I was screaming so hard I thought the whole town
would come and save me,” she recalls.
It was not to be: she spent the next four years, ill
and abused, in a Baghdad prison.
She was freed after an international campaign that
led to pardons for several political prisoners in
Iraq.
In 1981, she was again jailed briefly under the rule
of then dictator Saddam Hussein. And then again 10 years later over a protest
in Amarah against the repercussions of the Gulf War over Kuwait.
Like several other women prisoners, she was granted
a pardon after just a few months.
Today the photographic studio is still welcoming
clients, and despite her age, the revolutionary flame still burns brightly in
Samira.
She hails the October 2019 uprising, sparked by
angry young Iraqis seeking to bring those in power to account.
“The protesters should
have transformed their movement into a massive revolution to root out
corruption and the corrupt,” Mazaal said.
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