Shahidul Alam

Shahidul Alam (born 1955) is a Bangladeshi photojournalist, public speaker, storyteller, writer, curator, blogger, and educationist.

Shahidul Alam
শহিদুল আলম
Shahidul Alam in 2017
Born1955 (age 68–69)
NationalityBangladeshi
EducationJhenidah Cadet College, University of Liverpool
Alma materUniversity of Liverpool (BSc)
Bedford College, University of London (D.Phil)
Occupation(s)Photojournalism, teaching, social rights activism
Known for
SpouseRahnuma Ahmed
Parent
RelativesKazi Salahuddin (cousin)
Nassakh
Nawab Abdul Latif

An institution builder, Alam founded the Drik Picture Library in 1989, the Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in 1998, the Chobi Mela International Photography Festival in 1999, and Majority World agency in 2007.[1]

He introduced email to Bangladesh in early 90's. He developed Bangladesh's first webzine and first portal.

His books include Nature's Fury (2007) and My Journey as a Witness (2011).

A photographer for over forty years, his work has been featured in leading publications across the globe and exhibited in MOMA, Centre Pompidou, and the Tate Modern. He has spoken at Harvard, Stanford, Oxford, and Cambridge Universities. Alam has sat on the International Jury of World Press Photo and was the first Asian chair.[2]

Alam was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society in 2001.[3] In 2014, he was awarded the Shilpakala Padak by the President of Bangladesh and in 2018 the Humanitarian Award from the Lucie Awards. He was a Time magazine persons of the year in 2018. He was the CASE Humanitarian of the Year in 2021. He is a National Geographic Explorer at Large. In 2022, he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of Arts in London.

Early life and education

Kazi Shahidul Alam was born in Dacca, East Pakistan (modern-day Bangladesh) in 1955 and grew up at Dhanmondi. He was one of the three children of physician Kazi Abul Monsur and child psychologist Anwara Monsur. He belongs to the Kazi family of Rajapur in Faridpur district. This family was founded by Kazi Abdur Rasool, son of Shah Azimuddin, who was said to have been descended from the Arab Muslim general Khalid ibn al-Walid and have been appointed as Kazi in Mughal Bengal.[4][5]

In his childhood, he used to float through Dhaka's congested arteries atop his slight fold-up bicycle.[6] He studied at the boarding school Jhenidah Cadet College.

Alam took his undergraduate education in the University of Liverpool. During his time in Liverpool, he made a habit of walking in the streets in his lungi, a traditional South Asian garment. In his college year, he was introduced to activism through his involvement with the Socialist Workers Party.[6] He graduated from the university in 1976 by earning his BSc in biochemistry and genetics.[7]

Alam relocated to London for his Doctor of Philosophy study at Bedford College, University of London. Alam started to take an interest in photograph during his time in London. At Bedford, he also worked as a research chemist to invent alternative printing processes for photographs.[8] In 1983, he won the Harvey Harris Trophy from London Arts Council for a photograph that he took. This boosted his confidence in pursuing a career in photography.[7][6] In the same year, he received his D.Phil in organic chemistry.[9]

Career

Alam with the winners of the 2013 BOBs awards.

In 1989, he set up Drik Picture Library and in 1998, Pathshala South Asian Institute of Photography (later Pathshala South Asian Media Institute), in Dhaka.[10][11] Pathshala "has trained hundreds of photographers".[12][11] Alam founded the Chobi Mela International Photography Festival in 1999, the most important and prestigious photography festival in Asia, of which he remains a director.[11][13] Alam set up the South Asian Media Academy.[10]

Alam has covered news events including natural disasters, governmental upheavals, the deaths of garment factory workers, human rights abuses, Bangladeshi government and military's repression and the "disappearances" of political opponents.[1] [12]

Alam is among the last to have photographed Nelson Mandela. This was during a meeting between Professor Muhammad Yunus and Madiba on 10 July 2009, at the Nelson Mandela Foundation in Johannesburg.

He was a member of the jury board of The BOBs' award.[14]

Crossfire

Crossfire is a series of photographs taken by Alam. The exhibition was curated by Peruvian art critic and curator Jorge Villacorta, a colleague of Alam. The exhibition was completed in 2010 and displayed at Drik Gallery in Dhaka.[15][16] The photographs show locations and objects where extrajudicial killings happened because of Bangladesh's Rapid Action Battalion (RAB).[16] Human Rights Watch has called RAB a "death squad" because of these reported killings.[17] RAB was established in 2004 as a paramilitary force to combat gangsters and thugs in the streets, but in late 2007, the battalion was accused of over 350 extrajudicial killings and the torturing of hundreds more.[18]

State repression

Crossfire

The closure by RAB and the local police of the 2010 exhibition titled Crossfire on the topic of extrajudicial killings sparked nationwide protests.[19][10][20][21][12] Drik Gallery which housed the exhibition was barricaded before its opening on grounds that the photographs would “create anarchy”.[22] After Drik's lawyers served legal notice on the government, the police barricade was removed. The response of the court and subsequent events enabled Drik to open the exhibition for public viewing on 31 March.[23]

2018 Bangladesh road safety protests

On 5 August 2018, David Bergman tweeted that Shahidul Alam had been taken from his home in Dhanmondi by 30 to 35 plainclothes police officers. This happened shortly after Alam, in a live interview with Al Jazeera, criticized the government's violent response to the 2018 Bangladesh road safety protests which he had been documenting via live videos on Facebook.[24][12][25][26] Alam was believed to have been arrested for saying that the protests "stemmed from anger about widespread government corruption, and not just the bus accident that initially sparked them."[27] He was shown arrested by the Dhaka Metropolitan Police the next day.[26] Alam was charged under Section 57 of the Information and Communication Technology Act and was remanded for seven days. Shahidul Alam told the court that he had been tortured while in police custody.[10][11] The Supreme Court halted the seven-day remand on 7 August, and after observing his physical condition ordered authorities to admit him to a hospital. Alam was taken to a hospital on 8 August at 9 am. However, Alam was taken back to the office of the Detective Branch of police again at 2 pm on the same day. Alam's lawyer Sara Hossain said the case would not stand in court.[28]

Amnesty International and the Committee to Protect Journalists urged the Bangladeshi government to immediately release Alam without filing charges,[12][29] as did Mumbai Press Club, Bombay News Photographer Association,[30] Reporters Without Borders[10] PEN International,[31] the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, the Prince Claus Fund and its network partners, Free Press Unlimited, and the World Press Photo Foundation,[32][33][34] United Nations human rights experts, and the European Parliament.

Amplified through the hashtag #FreeShahidulAlam, Alam received an outpouring of support from Nobel Laureates, authors, fellow photographers, artists, intellectuals, friends and family. The Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights organisation issued a statement that was signed by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Shirin Ebadi, Tawakkol Karman, Richard Branson, Richard Curtis, Professor Muhammad Yunus, Óscar Arias Sánchez, José Manuel Ramos-Horta, and Gro Harlem Brundtland amongst others.[35] This was an adaptation from a letter posted a day earlier on Twitter by Hollywood star Sharon Stone which also included signatories such as Jimmy Wales.[36] A joint statement by leading British artists and curators was signed amongst others by Anish Kapoor, Akram Khan, and Steve McQueen.[37] A World Press Photo statement released 100 days into his detention was signed amongst others by Romila Thapar and Salima Hashmi.[38] Separate statements were issued by Urvashi Butalia,[39] Abdul Sattar Edhi's son Faisal Edhi,[40] Angela Y. Davis,[41][42] Vijay Prashad, Arundhati Roy and Noam Chomsky.[31][43] As many as 426 academics from various universities in Australia urged the Government of Bangladesh to release him immediately.[44]

In Dhaka, on October 16, around 100 photographers formed a human chain at the base of Raju Memorial Sculpture under the banner of “Shahidul Alam Er Muktir Dabitey Alokchitribrindo”.[45]

On the other hand, Sajeeb Wazed, the son of Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, questioned those defending and demanding freedom of Alam in a controversial Facebook post.[46][47]

Alam has recounted some of his experiences in his reply to Arundhati Roy's open letter addressed to him while he was in jail.[48][49]

After 107 days of imprisonment, Alam was granted bail by Bangladesh High Court and released on 20 November 2018.[50]

He has challenged the legality of the Section 57 of the ICT act with the Bangladesh Supreme Court after his challenge was rejected by Bangladesh High Court.[51][52]

Arundhati Roy at Chobi Mela X

On March 4, 2019, the Dhaka Metropolitan Police revoked an invitation for Arundhati Roy’s talk scheduled as part of the 10th edition of Chobi Mela International Photography Festival. After 24 hours of uncertainty, the organizers of Chobi Mela finally held her talk with Shahidul Alam at an alternative venue.[53][54][55]

Biennale für aktuelle Fotografie 2024

On 21 November 2023, authorities from the German cities of Mannheim, Ludwigshafen, and Heidelberg, where the photography exhibition Biennale für aktuelle Fotografie’s 10th edition was set to take place in March 2024, canceled the event because Alam's criticism of the Israeli Occupying Forces' assault on Palestinians in Gaza was deemed "anti-semitic".[56] The Biennale’s board and the three cities’ mayors of cultural affairs, in agreement with the longstanding main sponsor BASF, decided that Alam’s social media activity since 7 October 2023 meant that the Biennale could not go ahead.[57] Alam stated that the Biennale had "incorrectly equated" his social media activity "to antisemitism”. “We feel that the failure to draw a distinction between criticism of a government and of a peoples, is irresponsible and damaging to the honesty of public discourse,” he said.[58] Alam told Al Jazeera: “I am an anti-Zionist which means I am against colonialism, settler colonialism, against racism, against apartheid and genocide. I am not an anti-Semite, and it’s most unfortunate that Germany chooses to conflate the two, [as this] serves and furthers the white supremacist agenda.”[59] In retrospect the cancellation of the Biennale marked the start of a new era of German repression.

Publications

Author

  • Nature's Fury. Hibrida; London: Concern Worldwide, 2007. ISBN 978-0955029974. Text in English and Urdu.
  • Portraits of Commitment. UNAIDS, 2009.
  • My Journey as a Witness. Skira, 2011. Edited by Rosa Maria Falvo. ISBN 978-88-572-0966-1.[1]
  • The Tide Will Turn. Göttingen, Germany: Steidl, 2019. ISBN 978-3-95829-693-0.

Editor

  • Blink: 100 photographers, 10 curators, 10 writers. New York: Phaidon, 2002. 2004, ISBN 978-0714844589. Alam was a joint curator.
  • Under the Banyan Tree. Dhaka, Bangladesh: Pathshala, South Asian Media Academy, 2011. Edited by Alam. ISBN 9789843334442.
  • Ways of Life. Dhaka, Bangladesh: Drik Picture Library, 2014. Edited by Alam. ISBN 9789843383099. With an introduction by Rubana Huq.

Published works

  • "Humanitarian to a Nation: Abdul Sattar Edhi". Published in: Aramco World (2004). Written by Richard Covington, photographs by Shahidul Alam.
  • "What One Person Can Do: The Amazing Life of Abdul Sattar Edhi". Written by Richard Covington, photographs by Shahidul Alam. In: What Matters: The World's Preeminent Photojournalists and Thinkers Depict Essential Issues of Our Time (2008) edited by David Elliot Cohen.

Exhibitions

Own work

Curator

Professorships

Awards

References

External links