Fragments of Fietas
Fragments of Fietas
Between 1948 and 2016, David Goldblatt returned periodically to Fietas, a suburb
west of Johannesburg’s city centre, to photograph the impact of punitive
segregation and ethnic cleansing wrought by apartheid legislation on its
residents and landscape. Moved by the life force of the predominantly Indian
community’s families, shopkeepers, and small business owners, Goldblatt
attempted ‘to grasp something of their life and what they had built.’ The
resulting photographs, collected and published here for the first time, form a
vivid social document of Fietas before, during, and after its destruction under
the Group Areas Act. Earlier images of storefronts and domestic interiors
contrast poignantly with those of their demolition from the late 1970s onwards.
Dignified portraits of traders in their stores capture their determined efforts
to build a life for their families. Interviews with past and present Fietas
residents close the book, recalling the testimonials of Goldblatt’s subjects in
The Transported of Kwandebele and Ex-Offenders at the Scene of Crime. Exemplary
of Goldblatt’s empathetic and observational documentary style, these photographs
and oral histories establish a generous exchange between photographer and
subject. Together these materials preserve narratives of Fietas as a racially
diverse community that existed in defiance of apartheid. An accompanying essay
by Professor Ashwin Desai places Fietas within the wider historical context of
Indian South Africans and racist ideology before and after the advent of
apartheid, completing a compelling reference to a little known community forever
changed by the darkest point in South Africa’s history.
Share



