Omar Badsha
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Omar Badsha is one of South Africa's foremost documentary photographers, artists, political and trade union activists and historian. He was born in Durban, Kwa Zulu Natal on the 27 June 1945. He is a third generation South African of Indian origin and comes from a Gujarati Sunni Vhora family. His father Ebrahim Badsha was one of the South African pioneer black artists and a founding member Bantu, Indian, Coloured Arts (BICA)a organisation strted by Durban artists in 1951.
Badsha is himself considered as one of the early pioneers of "resistance art" in the early 1960's. He became an anti-apartheid activists during his high schools days he went on to play a significant role in that countries liberation history. He was one of the activists who revived the Natal Indian Congress in the 1970's and the independent left wing trade union movement that grew out of the famous 1973 Durban strikes. Badsha established and was the first secretary of the Chemical Workers Industrial Union. He was detained, harassed, had a book of his "letter To Farzanah" banned in the late seventies. he was one of those who was denied a passport and never allowed to travelled out side the country until 1990.
He is an award winning artists and photographer and has exhibited extensively in South Africa and internationally. He is the author of a number of photographic books and was the co-founder of the famous South African photographers collective Afrapix. He is the founded of South African History Online, South Africa's largest history website.