Textos sobre Verger
Entrevistas de Verger
“A little bit of a Rebel” The Life and Legacy of Pierre Fatumbi Verger from a Global North-South Perspective
por Noam Cohen*
*Noam Cohen, born in Israel, based in Germany, is a master’s student at Leipzig University in African Studies, after completing his B.A in Tel Aviv University in General History & African Studies with Magna Cum Laude. He is focusing on North-South dynamics, knowledge production, African modern history, civil society and human rights in Africa and around the world.
Abstract
Pierre Fatumbi Verger, born in Paris, France and died in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil, lived during almost the entire 20th century. From an early age Verger felt constrained in his family socio-economic class, so he chose to “escape”. He became a nomad photographer, and later a researcher, among the most unknown societies of his era, mostly native Africans and their diasporic communities in the Americas. His figure was best described by Gilberto Freyre, that said that Verger was “giving voice to silenced and forgotten communities on both sides of the Atlantic.”.[1]
Lühning stated that he was one of the great researchers to engage with Afro-Brazilian religion and culture,[2] while Rodriguez noted that Verger was among the most outstanding photographers of the 20th century.[3] Yet, his figure has been perceived differently in the global North and South. As Cohen recalled, even though his substantial legacy, Verger remained “marginalized figure, completely outside the canon of the global North.”.[4]
Verger, that was expelled from school at the age of 17 and was a proud autodidact, embraced unique methods in the field, which helped him to gain legitimacy from the people he lived among in Bahia and West Africa. However, paradoxically, he didn’t gain an equal amount of support from the Northen-based academy, particularly from the English-speaking one.
In this paper I will attempt to show that his neglection have links with his unique methods and antagonist position towards the world of Western knowledge production. More importantly, I argue that his pioneering ways of working has an important role in understanding North-South dynamics.
To read the full text: “A little bit of a Rebel” – The Life and Legacy of Pierre Fatumbi Verger from a Global North-South Perspective.
[1] Angela Lühning. (1999). Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. Cahiers Du Brésil Contemporain, 38/39, pp. 86.
[2] Lühning. (1999). Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 75.
[3] Javier Escudero Rodriguez (2022). Pierre Fatumbi Verger United States of America, 1934 & 1937. Damiani. pp. 19.
[4] Peter Cohen, personal interview at FPV, 21.02.2024.
Introduction
“Pierre Fatumbí Verger, Frenchman by birth, Bahian by choice and African by affinity.”7 Lühning, a view from Bahia (1999)
Shortly before he passed away, Pierre Verger said that he considers himself “a little bit of a rebel”, due to what he considered as his “special way of working and interests”.8 Even though he was born to a Parisian bourgeois family in 1902, Verger attempted during his life to “free himself and escape” from his family socio-economic class, status and lifestyle.9 When he turned 30, he lost all his family, which led him to take three decisions:
1) To dedicate his life to traveling the world;
2) To become a photographer, and;
3) To commit suicide once he turns 40.
Eventually, Verger did not committed suicide, but rather lived through most of the 20th century, until he passed away on February 11th, 1996. However, the other two decisions made significant changes in his life: In the early 1930s Verger bought a Rolleiflex camera and became a globetrotter.
After traveling and working in six continents, Verger arrived in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil, on August 5, 1946. Even though he continued to travel constantly for another 35 years, Verger immediately said that he felt “the charm of the Good Land” [“Boa Terra”]10 and he settled down in Salvador. There, Verger was amazed by the Afro-Brazilian cultures, and he developed strong ties with the local communities, which will later become his “new family”.11
In Brazil, Verger was especially fascinated by the people of Candomblé, Afro-Diasporic religion that was mainly practiced in Bahia, and today it has spread across the country. In West Africa, where he stayed approximately 17 years, Verger was attracted to Ifá, Yoruba divination system in which the divine spirits are called Orishas.12
7 Lühning. (1999). Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 75
8 Carles Solís & Pierre Verger (2009). Pierre Verger: Nunca Tuve la sensación Detrabajar. Pasajes, 30, pp. 102.
9 Pierre Fátúmbí Verger. (2011). Pierre Verger: 50 anos de fotografia: 1932-1982. Fundação Pierre Verger. pp. 318.
10 Author Note: Boa Terra is an expression often used by the local habitants of Bahia to describe their love to the Land.
11 Flora Gil, Gilberto Gil, Leonardo Monteiro de Barros, Pedro Buarque de Hollanda (1998). Pierre Verger – Mensageiro Entre Dois Mundos [DVD]. Brazil; Gege Produções.
12 Heather Shirey. (2009). Transforming the Orixás: Candomblé in Sacred and Secular Spaces in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil. African Arts, 42(4). pp. 62-67.
Even though he never engaged with academic discipline as student, in the 1950s Verger shifted from been a photographer to a researcher. During the second half of his life, Verger managed to publish about 130 articles and books in multiple languages, including non-Western languages, with non-Western publications.13
His research was focused on various topics, such as the historical interrelationship between the Bight of Benin and Bahia, socio-economic aspects in Brazil and Africa, traditional medicine, African poetry, indigenous knowledge, cultural and language preservation and more.14
Alongside exploring Verger’s work and legacy, this paper will engage with his pioneering methods in the field, that helped him to obtain a greater honor in West Africa and Brazil, the places he was most active, rather than from the global North, where he reminded an obscured figure.15
I argue that Verger’s unique working methods tackled issues such as knowledge production, academic dynamics, centralizing marginalized people, global North-South thinking flows, ethics and human relations.
13 Peter Cohen. (1999). Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. Cahiers Du Brésil Contemporain, 38/39, pp. 128. 14 See literature of Verger in English at the Bibliography: Verger (1978). African Cultural Survivals in the New World: The examples of Brazil and Cuba. Verger. (1964). Bahia and the West African trade, 1549-1851. Verger. (1955). Yoruba influences in Brazil. Verger. (1967). The poetry of Yoruba leaves. Verger. (1995). Ewé: The use of plants in Yoruba society.
15 Cohen. (1999). Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist, pp. 128, 136. See also: Alessandra Brivio, (2013). Notes sur le Culte des Orisa et Vodun. History in Africa, 40(1), pp. 287-289. Ana Lucia Araujo (2013). Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: Negotiating connections between Brazil and the bight of Benin. Luso-Brazilian Review, 50(1), pp. 121.
Methodology
I first encountered the work of Pierre Fatumbi Verger in 2022, as a master’s student in African Studies at the University of Leipzig. Following my personal interest in his life and work, I contacted Fundação Pierre Verger (FPV), and offered to conduct a research internship there. Angela Lühning, the foundation’s secretary director, agreed, and so I arrived at Salvador da Bahia in October 2023 for a six-month internship for FPV.
During my research, my main limitation was my insufficient level of Portuguese and lack of knowledge in French, languages with broad literature about Verger. However, during my time at FPV, I received great help from my colleagues there, who helped me to translate important materials from Portuguese and French to English.
This paper employed an integrated and multifaceted methodology to provide a comprehensive understanding of Verger life, work and legacy. During my internship I conducted extensive literature review and archival research: I covered literature about theories from the South and the academic dynamics with the global North, together with plenty of publications about the life and legacy of Verger. More importantly, I had the privilege to dive into the articles, books, personal correspondences, interviews, songs, movies, and photographs of Verger.
Throughout my research I conducted four in-depth interviews with key figures in the life and legacy of Verger: Alex Baradel,16 Angela Lühning,17 Negrizu,18 and Peter Cohen.19 Each one of them provided me with first-hand accounts or analyzations of Verger. In addition, while living in Salvador for six months, the visual and historical memory of Verger, within museums and galleries, as well as from testimonies from ordinary people in the city, contributed to a contextualized view of his legacy nowadays.
16 Baradel, French-born based in Bahia, had his first contact with FPV in 1999 and has been working in the foundation since 2000, nowadays as the head of Photographic Collection.
17 Lühning, German-born based in Bahia, met Verger in 1984 and stayed close to him until he passed away. As a Prof. for Ethnomusicologist at Universidade Federal da Bahia, she wrote in abundance about the life and work of Verger. Today Lühning is the secretary director of FPV and coordinating the activities of Espaço Cultural Pierre Verger.
18 Carlos Pereira dos Santos, alias Negrizu, is a Bahian artist and dancer. He met Verger in the 1970s and in the 1980s he was taking care of his photograph negatives. Currently he is working for FPV and Espaço Cultural Pierre Verger.
19 Cohen, US-born based in Bahia, conducted a research about Verger as social scientist in the 1990s and worked broadly in the global South as Social Safeguards Specialist.
Between Paris, Dahomey and Bahia: Verger’s Early Life
“I started traveling, not so much driven by a desire to do ethnographic research or journalistic reports, but rather as a result of the need to distance myself, to free myself and escape the environment in which I had been living until then, whose prejudices and rule of conduct did not make me happy.”20
Verger, 50 anos (1982)
Pierre Edouard Leopold Verger was born in Paris on November 4th, 1902, to a wealthy bourgeois family with Dutch-Belgian ancestry. His family was the owners of Établissements Léopold Verger et Co., a considerably well-known printing company at that time, until it went bankrupt in 1927, and lost most of its assets.21
Not much is known about Verger’s occupation as a young adult, however from his late life correspondence it’s very likely that in the 1920s he worked as salesman for a metal company that produced frames for street advertising in Paris. That work, along with his father prestigious printing company, helped Verger to meet Parisian intellectuals and artists from the New Vision movement.22
In the film Mensageiro Entre Dois Mundos, Verger’s old friends, Pierre Boucher and Maurice Baquet, recalled that he always felt constrained in his social class, and as a symbol to the beginning of his new life, Verger took off his suits dress, started to wear short pants and walked barefoot in the streets of Paris.23
When Verger was almost 90 years old, he stated in an interview that from a young age he renounced his family status: “I reacted against my family way of thinking, and I sought to assert my disagreement, so I thought that by doing the opposite of what was expected from me I was going to be happier”.24 It’s very likely that Verger’s sexual identity, as a gay person that was born to a conservative family, has also affected his rejection to his family discipline and manners.
20 Verger. 50 anos de Fotografia. pp. 318.
21 Cohen. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist, pp. 129,
22 Alex Baradel, personal communication at FPV, 27.11.2023.
23 Gil et al. Mensageiro Entre Dois Mundos [DVD].
24 Véronique Mortaigne & Pierre Fátúmbí Verger (1992, September 15). Entretien avec Véronique Mortaigne. Le Monde.
However, throughout the years, he rarely spoke with his heterosexual friends about his sexual identity.
Pierre’s father, Leopold Verger, that later was always referred with a sense of bitterness by his son, has died in 1915. Pierre’s two older brothers, Louis and Jean, died in 1914 and 1929, the death of the latter caused him a great sorrow. In 1932, his beloved mother, Marie Verger, passed away and he became kinless. This situation has catalyzed his lifechanging decisions to become a traveler and later a photographer.25
On his 30th birthday, Verger decided that once he will be 40, he will commit suicide. Even though he claimed that he planned to kill himself since he didn’t want to become “a senile old man”26, I argue that his death wish should be regarded together with the dreadful loss of his family, since he made his declaration approximately three months after his mother’s death.
It’s unclear how serious were Verger’s intentions regarding his suicide, since both in his correspondence and personal diary, this topic wasn’t mentioned again. Baradel stated that the decision to travel the world served as a therapy for Verger’s family loss.27 Therefore, I assume that this ‘therapy’ helped him to withdraw his decision to end his life, since he found his destiny.
Lühning divided Verger’s life into three main chapters: his early life in France, later as a globetrotter and finally as the messenger that traveled between Brazil and West Africa. Due to his constant movement around the world, Lühning claimed that it was almost impossible to understand Verger’s complexity during his life span, since “nobody stayed close to him during all these periods”. Lühning, that met Verger in 1984 and remained close to him until he passed away, described him as a person that often-wanted company, but usually preferred to stay alone, perhaps due to his shy and humble character.28
In 1932 Verger went on his first trip, together with his close friend and photographer, Boucher, to explore Corsica’s 1,500km perimeter by foot.29 This trip turned out to be highly significant, since it was then that Boucher introduced Verger to the Rolleiflex camera, that became his camera for the next 50 years. Later in his life, Verger claimed that he never desired to be a professional photographer, but rather just wanted to “imitate” his friend, so he bought a Rollei for himself.30
25 Alex Baradel., Pierre Fátúmbí Verger & Raul Lody. (2002). O Olhar Viajante de Pierre Fatumbi Verger. FPV. pp. 216. 26 Ibid. 50 anos de Fotografia. pp. 318, 333.
27 Alex Baradel, personal communication at FPV, 12.01.2024.
28 Angela Lühning, personal Interview at FPV, 15.01.2024.
29 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist, pp. 129,
30 Solís & Verger (2009). Pierre Verger: Nunca Tuve la sensación Detrabajar. pp. 102.
From 1932 onwards, Verger traveled the world extensively. In October that year, after coming back from Corsica, he went to the Soviet Union for the 15 years celebration of the 1917 revolution. He felt a great disappointed from the experience in the USSR since it was then that he understood that even if he will embrace the exact opposite of his family lifestyle, he won’t necessarily be happier.31
Figure 2 – Verger in River São Francisco, Bom Jesus da Lapa, Bahia, Brazil (1950).32
31 Solís & Verger. Nunca Tuve la sensación Detrabajar. pp. 102. See also: Véronique Mortaigne & Pierre Fátúmbí Verger (1992, September 15). Entretien avec Véronique Mortaigne. Le Monde.
32 Marcel Gautherot © Fundação Pierre Verger.
In 1934, together with Boucher and other photographers, Verger founded Alliance Photo in Paris, a photographic agency that operated until 1940. The company helped him to fund his trips around the world, and after its closing, Verger worked for several considerable magazines and newspapers: Between 1934-1935 he worked for Paris-Soir, and from 1935 to 1936 for the Daily Mirror in London. Later, in Latin America, he worked for Argentina Libre in 1941, and in the following year for Mundo Argentino. In 1946 he was contracted by the Brazilian newspaper O Cruzeiro, that helped him to obtain his first visa permit in the country. Later he worked also for O Cruzeiro Internacional, there he was responsible also for the publication of several articles about cultural and economic aspects, mostly in West Africa. 33
During the years, Verger traveled and worked in North, Central and South America, the Pacific islands in Polynesia, Asia, Europe, the Caribbean and Africa.34 From those substantial traveling experiences, worth mentioning are his personal realization in Bora Bora and his long working periods with local indigenous groups in Mexico and Peru.
In early 1933 Verger arrived at Bora Bora, which felt to him like “the end of the world”. There, he wanted to be, as the name of Georges Simenon’s novel, Banana Tourist.35 However, once he settled down in his cabin, Verger saw on the wall a calendar from his family’s printing company. He recalled that then he realized that “it was not so easy to flee, to escape.”.36
Another important experience was his firsts working experience with indigenous group as a photographer in Latin America. Between 1936 to 1937, Verger stayed in Mexico, where he took photographs of the local indigenous communities that were featured in Paul Hartmann’s book “Mexique” in 1938. In his photographs, Verger captured the life in the countryside of post
Revolution Mexico.37 Romo remarked that those photographs, perhaps unintentionally, helped to promote tourism in the area, but also they were demonstrating the authenticity of the indigenous people.38
33 Dilva Frazão. (2021, February 22). Biografia de Pierre Verger. E biografia.
34 Gil et al. Mensageiro Entre Dois Mundos [DVD].
35 Ibid. 50 anos de Fotografia. pp. 319.
36 Ibid. Nunca Tuve la sensación Detrabajar. pp.101.
37 Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. (2019). México indígena en mirada de Pierre Verger. Retrieved January 15, 2024.
38 Anadelia Romo (2022). Pierre Verger and the Construction of a Black Folk, 1946–1951. In Selling Black Brazil Race, Nation, and Visual Culture in Salvador, Bahia. University of Texas Press. pp. 103.
39 Angela Luhning. (2022). Um fotógrafo antropólogo: trajetórias transatlânticas de Pierre Fatumbi Verger. in BEROSE International Encyclopaedia of the Histories of Anthropology, Paris. pp. 5.
In 1940 Verger was mobilized to Senegal, as part of World War II, where he served as a radio operator and photographer.39 In the following year he was released from the French army and arrived in Peru, where he was contracted by the National Museum of Lima. In 1945, he published the volume of photographs “Fiestas y danzas en el Cuzco y en los Andes” that captured cultural preservation by representing the local indigenous groups of the Andean region.40
Figure 3 – Fiesta de Santiago, Cusco, Peru (1939).41
Those were Verger’s first influential works among indigenous groups. Later, working among native groups and cultural preservation will become his main photographic and ethnographic fieldwork in Bahia and Africa: capturing Past and Modern, popular festive gatherings, indigenous forms of knowledge, street vendors and other spontaneous occasions that were shading lights on the life of ordinary people.
40 Romo (2022). Pierre Verger and the Construction of a Black Folk, 1946–1951. pp. 103-104.
41 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
In August 1946 Verger boarded in Rio de Janeiro the last-ever sail of the small steamship Comandante Capela and arrived in Salvador da Bahia. His first photo in the city captured the church of Santo Antônio Além do Carmo, while a crane is in the center of the image, see figure 4. The French sociologist Roger Bastide, who will become Verger’s close friend, was the first to draw his attention to Bahia’s Afro-Brazilian religions and its diversity, when they met in São Paulo the same year. Before that, Verger read Jorge Amado’s notable novel, “Jubiabá”, that was his first indirect contact with Candomblé and Bahia.42 Figure 4 – Verger’s 1st photo in Salvador (1946).43
Later in his life, Verger described Candomblé religion as “an African survival that has been maintained right at the heart of Brazilian civilization.”.44 He developed deep connection with its believers, until becoming one of them. Verger had a special bond with Maria Bibiana do Espírito Santo, also known as Mãe Senhora, the third priestess of the holy Candomblé temple of Ilê Axé Opô Afonjá in Salvador. In 1948, shortly before traveling from Bahia to West Africa, Mãe Senhora, that was Verger’s spiritual mother, gave him a divine necklace, colored red and white to symbolize Xangô. This gesture, as Araujo underlined, was like-a “passport” for him among Vodun and Orisha religious leaders in West Africa.45
After the death of Mãe Senhora in 1967, Verger encouraged and helped Balbino Daniel de Paula to establish the new holy temple of Candomblé, Ilê Axé Opô Aganjú, in Lauro de Freitas, in the suburbs of Salvador. Until today, Balbino, also known as Obaray de Xangô, is the first priest of the temple and Verger’s photographs are presented in the temple.46 See figure 5, Verger’s iconic photograph of Mãe Senhora.
42 Gil et al. Mensageiro Entre Dois Mundos [DVD].
43 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
44 Pierre Fátúmbí Verger (1978). African Cultural Survivals in the New World: The examples of Brazil and Cuba. The African Diaspora, 5(4), pp. 88.
45 Ana Lucia Araujo (2013). Pierre Fátúmbí verger: Negotiating connections between Brazil and the bight of Benin. pp. 116-117. 46 Angela Lühning, personal communication, 05.03.2024.
Figure 5 – Mãe Senhora in Opô Afonjá, Salvador (1948). 47
On March 28th, 1953, Verger was initiated to Ifá as Babalaô (Yoruba diviner – the core of the oral traditions) in the town of Ketu, the kingdom of Dahomey, nowadays Benin. Before that, he received the religious name Oju Oba, which means the eyes of the king, from Xangô, the Orisha of thunder and storms. During his initiation he also received his new name – Fátúmbí, which means “the one that was reborn into Ifá”. Then, he recalled: “Pierre Verger died, and Fátúmbí was born”.48 Looking back on his early life, Verger said:
“The only conclusion I can draw, looking back on the years I have lived, is that I never knew very well what I wanted. I knew on the other hand what I didn’t want. By refusing to do what I didn’t want, my life took on a certain form, without me necessarily being aware of it.”49
47 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
48 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist, pp. 135,
49 Lühning. (1999). Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 76.
Despite the fact that he lived in turbulent era, Verger took a non-political public approach towards the Colonialism, World War II and the dictatorships time in Brazil and Benin. I argue that even though he didn’t support these repulsive phenomena, his silent approach, and later explanation regarding his reserved behavior, should be critically referred. From an historical point of view, among certain circles in Brazil, Benin and France, he was in an influential position and could have taken a firmer stand publicly.
Even if it wasn’t publicly, important to mention is that Verger showed solidarity with the resistance to the military government of Brazil, at least on one occasion. As Reis showed, Verger had long lasting professional and personal contact with Paulo de Moraes Farias, a Brazilian historian and Africanist that was exiled from the country due to his strong opposition to the military government that took power in 1964.50
Farias, that first fled to West Africa and later settled in the UK, kept over the years close connection with Verger. In their correspondence it’s clear that Verger not only assisted Farias to obtain knowledge about Ifá and with further professional issues, but also he was supporting him emotionally and showing solidarity with his situation, in times when Farias had high concerns for his safety as political refugee.51
Those correspondences can indicate that Verger public approach and personal communication were not necessarily matching; perhaps a deeper research among his personal notes and correspondences can reveal further expressions of his attitude towards the topics that were mentioned above.
One can argue that Verger’s life was characterized by a certain sense of ethical egoism, as he was often following his own self-interest; perhaps this can also explain his a-political approach. Moreover, he hasn’t formed a family or had long-lasting relationships. I believe that this alleged egoism wasn’t one that characterized by the inversion of altruism, but rather was an indication of his individualist spirit.52
50 Luiza Nascimento dos Reis (2019). O exílio africano de Paulo Farias (África Ocidental, 1964-1969). Tempo, 25(2), pp. 430. 51 Reis (2019). O exílio africano de Paulo Farias (África Ocidental, 1964-1969). pp. 448–451.
52 Andrew Sola (2023). Egoism Versus Altruism. In Ethics and Pandemics. Springer Nature Switzerland. pp 123.
During his life, Verger prioritized himself as autonomous and adopted distinctive approaches compared to the mainstream, attributes that suggest his individualist spirit. Moreover, he kept himself separated from the ones that could harm his goals of traveling and working, while he constantly maintained his independence.53 Freyre once said that Verger was a “free man” because he wasn’t obliged to academic compromises, bureaucratic ties to universities or scientific orthodoxy. 54
Figure 6 – Verger working, (n.d). 55
To conclude Verger’s early life chapter, I’ve tried to manifest that one of the most profound characteristics of his life span was his constant subtext or outspoken rebellion against society’s conventions: ever since he was child that refused to fit into his family discipline, through his decisions to be a nomad and work in the global South, and finally his individualist spirit that led him to develop his unique methods, that will be discussed in the next chapter.
53 Henri Santos., Michael Varnum & Igor Grossmann. (2017). Global increases in individualism. Psychological Science, 28(9), pp. 1228. 54 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 79-80.
55 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
Without a Business Card: Unique Work and Methods “The first time I arrived in Africa was in 1988, together with Pierre Verger. However, thanks to his photos from Africa throughout the years, I felt that I’ve been there much before my first physical visit.”56
Negrizu, Interview at FPV (January 16th, 2024)
This chapter will focus on Verger’s transcultural and humanizing work and methods, particularly in Bahia and West Africa from the 1950’s, first as a photographer and later as a researcher. My intention isn’t to analyze his photographical work from a professional perspective per se, but rather to engage with his pioneering methods that have gradually developed over the years.
As mentioned in the previous chapter, Verger begun to work as a photographer in the early 1930’s and kept doing so for about 50 years. In this timeframe he took about 62,000 photographs, more than one-third of them were taken in Latin America, of which about 13,500 in Brazil. About 16,000 photographs were taken in Africa, of which half were in Yoruba culture countries. From the total sum, about 1,500 were color positives and the rest were in black and white, all in 6×6 format.57
Figure 7 – Negrizu & Verger (1988).58
Verger photographs often captured the daily life and beauty of ordinary people that he met spontaneously. Whether if it was a dockworker in the port, a vendor in the market or a worshipper in a festive ceremony – Verger showed through his photographs the charm and power of the one he shot:
“Verger captured the beauty of his subjects and especially the beauty of Black skin. By playing with light and shadow, his camera technique made the skin of the face glow […] Verger’s portraits thus granted a visibility to Black men and women as beautiful individuals, beautiful because of their race and skin color, not despite it.”59
56 Negrizu, personal interview at FPV, 16.01.2024.
57 Baradel., Verger & Lody. (2002). O Olhar Viajante de Pierre Fatumbi Verger. pp. 216.
58 © Edson Porto.
59 Ibid. Pierre Verger and the Construction of a Black Folk, 1946–1951. pp. 123
Figure 8 – Jovellanos, Cuba (1957).60
Verger was not the first to use his camera to show a deeper sensation rather than just objects. For example, Jacob Riis, the American-Danish photographer that worked for the New York Police Department, did so already at the end of the 19th century. Riis’s photographic work focused on the working-class immigrants of New York slums, and his work became a cornerstone in the world of photojournalism.61
60 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
61 Mary Strong., Laena Wilder. (2009). Documentary Photography in the Field. In Viewpoints: Visual Anthropologists at Work. University of Texas Press. pp. 33.
In Riis publication, How the Other Half Lives, the shots were not spontaneous as in Verger’s,62 but similarly they captured the life of ordinary people, with focus on closeups photography that humanized the subjects (See figures 8, 9,13).63 More importantly, Riss and Verger both chose to use the camera as a tool to create social change and/or show the human behind the photograph.
I observe that Verger work, similarly to Riis, tried to centralize marginalized people that were repressed due to unjust reasons. Verger’s substantial work as photographer among native and diasporic African communities in Bahia and Africa, helped to show the strength and beauty of the people on both side of the Atlantic Ocean.
Figure 9 – Congo (1952).64
Moreover, some of Verger’s photographs demonstrated the powerful side of the black person, often resemble as an ideal man: muscular laborer, strong, heroic, adonis-like. I argue that some of his photographs even have corresponding features with the image of Greek and Roman Gods, since they show the person as an autonomous and capable individual, see figures 10, 11.65 Metzner and Thoss emphasized his unique methods as photographer:
“Even when documenting the poorest living situations – like on his first journey to Africa in 1935/1936 – the people he photographed maintained their personality and dignity […] instead of looking down at people, the lens of his Rolleiflex gazes up at them and grants the person being photographed an almost heroic aura.”.66
62 Kris Somerville (2015). Flowers and thugs: The slum photos of Jacob Riis. The Missouri Review, 38(2), pp. 100–102.
63 For Verger’s closeups work, see: Alex Baradel., Pierre Fatumbi Verger. (2019). Todos Iguais, Todos Diferentes? Fundação Pierre Verger.
64 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
Figure 10 – Niger River, Gao, Mali (1935/36).67 Figure 11 – Port of São Luis, Brazil (1948).68
I argue that Verger’s legacy was important to observe since it underlined the importance of been there, in the fieldwork, to gain respect and legitimacy from within. Once in the field, Verger believed that there is no sense in trying to understand why certain things happened, but rather he emphasized the importance of observing how it happened, without imposing rigid logic into it, since it will lead to a consistent attempt to find an explanation, which he saw as a “Disease Theory”. 69
65 Mateja Rozman. & Tadej Strehovec. (2024). The Question of Beauty and the Aesthetic Value of the Image of the Mother of God in Pastoral Care and Catechesis. Religions (Basel, Switzerland ), 15(1).
66 Rodriguez (2022). Pierre Fatumbi Verger United States of America, 1934 & 1937. pp. 22. For further reading about Verger’s hatred to explanations, see: Cohen. A Disease Theory of Explanations. pp 141-145. In Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia.
67 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
68 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
69 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 92.
This approach contrasted with the zeitgeist of Western academic scholars in Bahia, led by Melville and Frances Herskovits, that believed that a researcher should be objective, and therefore distant from his subjects. The Herskovitses blamed Verger for destroying the “natural laboratory” in Bahia that they thought that they discovered earlier in the beginning of the 1940s, since he was reestablishing the lost connections between the diaspora and Africa.70
Moreover, Sansone wrote that in Frances Herskovits’s fieldnotes from 1967, there was a clear sense of competition that the couple felt with Verger’s work. However, as Lühning noted, Verger referred to them with a sense of amusement,71 probably due to the couple’s different approach, criticisms and competitive attitude.
Verger work highlighted the interrelations between the diaspora and Africa. Due to his extensive work over the connection between Afro-Brazilian and Africa, many regarded him as a Messenger between the two sides of the Atlantic Ocean. In her article, Alberto shed light about the role that Verger played as messenger:
“Verger offered something substantially different from other contemporary academics in Bahia: the possibility of renewed contacts with Africa […] Verger’s approach to the study of African-descended people in Bahia was distinct from the dominant anthropological and sociological perspectives of the time.”.72
I believe that in order to understand Verger’s photography work, one should look into the book introduction of his close friend, Bastide, that wrote: “The important thing is when progressing, not to lose your soul, the very soul that your ancestors shaped.”. 73 While observing many of
70 Anna Seiderer (2013). The legacy of Pierre Fatumbi Verger in the Whydah Historical Museum (Benin): Development of an ambivalent concept of hybridity. History in Africa, 40(1), pp. 305. See more: Araujo (2013). Pierre Fátúmbí verger: Negotiating connections between Brazil and the bight of Benin. pp. 118. For additional information about the Herskovitses, see: Livio Sansone. (2023). Field Station Bahia. (Vol. 1, Ser. Africa Multiple). Brill.
71 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 81-82.
72 Paulina Alberto. (2011). Difference: São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Salvador da Bahia, 1950–1964. In Terms of Inclusion: Black Intellectuals in Twentieth-Century Brazil. The University of North Carolina Press. pp. 224-229.
73 Roger Bastide. (1945). In Imagens do Nordeste Místico. forward, O Cruzeiro S.A. pp, 6.
Verger’s photographs, the sensation of dual respect is felt, both for the subject but also for the historical background, as Bastide suggested.
Figure 12 – Observing Verger’s photo in Dassa-Zoumé, Benin (1948/49). 74
Thus, corresponding with the analyzation of Wilder, who argued that photographs are generating historical significance over the time, I claim that Verger’s photographers immortalized Afro-Bahian culture and became part of the collective memory of many Brazilians and Africans.75 Verger once noted:
“Each photograph is a living, peculiar meaning, a value veering independent witness to an aesthetic concept […] In a memorial way, photography highlights and translates a view, a feeling that becomes the reference for a person, a place, a society, a culture. It gives me great pleasure to acknowledge that I often neglected the aesthetic side in favor of the spontaneity of expressions and scenes to be captured.”.76
Even though he started to publish his findings only when he was about 50 years old, Verger managed to circulate approximately 100 articles and 30 books, published in seven different languages, until his death in 1996. He constantly claimed that his initial ambition in researching was due to his own curiosity and for the benefit of his local friends on both sides of the Atlantic that wanted to know about their history and ancestors. In his writings, Verger dealt with a wide variety of fields, including African poetry, medicinal plants, oral history, economics, culture and religion, particularly of African and Afro-diasporic societies.77
74 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
75 Strong., Wilder. (2009). Documentary Photography in the Field. pp. 33
76 Ibid. O Olhar Viajante de Pierre Fatumbi Verger. pp. 215.
77 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist, pp. 127-128,
Figure 13 – Salvador downtown (n.d).78 Figure 14 – Samba in Salvador (1946-1953).79
Verger’s style of writing is characterized by a flowing, chronological and easy to read tone. His research was based both on his practical experience around the world, but also on deep archival review. He wrote about the “racial harmony” in Bahia, the origin of African elements in Brazil, the importance of language and cultural preservation, diasporic religions, the trans-Atlantic slave trade and syncretism.80 Unlike his public roaring silence regarding the phenomena mentioned above, regarding the inhuman Africans slave trade, Verger took a firmer stand:
“This African culture was brought across the Atlantic in the most painful conditions anyone could imagine […] When these people arrived, they were naked, stripped of everything, free neither in their body nor in their actions, forced to knuckle under to an alien way of life, to practice a strange religion and to speak a foreign language.”81
78 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
79 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
80 See the work of Verger in the bibliography of this article. For more, see: Angela Lühning. (1998). Pierre Fatumbi Verger e sua obra. Afro-Ásia, Salvador, n. 21-22,
81 Ibid. African Cultural Survivals in the New World. pp. 79.
Although he often claimed that he had “no theory whatsoever”, in Cohen’s article it’s clear that Verger did follow a certain theoretical methodological approach, especially once interacting with people in the field. For example, Verger thought that interviews, asking questions and seeking explanations is “pseudo-rational”, since certain things cannot be understood to an outsider – especially in religious and spiritual contexts. Moreover, Verger emphasized the importance of having empathy and detachment with people, which will lead to gain legitimacy from inside and mutual respect.82
In the only publication that can be considered as an autobiography, 50 Anos de Fotografia, Verger employed an analogy about business cards, to demonstrate his irritation from what he thought as “respectable people” that he defined as “empty and boring”.83
In this analogy, I argue that Verger tried to illustrate his strong alienation from conformism, Western knowledge production and intellectuals that are using business cards. He often expressed an antagonistic approach towards the Northen-based academia, materialism, and linear way of knowledge production. To sum this chapter,
I argue that Verger’s unique and pioneering methods created an intimate, deep and special connection with the people he met in the field.
More importantly, he managed to achieve his goal of centralized marginalized communities while he always emphasized the other beauty and power, without ever othering the so-called subjects.84
Figure 15 – Verger in his house, Salvador (n.d).85
82 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist, pp. 129-145.
83 Ibid. 50 anos de Fotografia. pp. 318.
84 Gabriele Griffin. (2017). Othering. Oxford Reference.
85 Anonymus © Fundação Pierre Verger.
Who knows Pierre Verger? A Complex Legacy
“Pierre Verger was part of a very special niche of white authors and artists that gained and maintained vast respect in Black horizons of Bahia, especially thanks to his strong relation with the divine and powerful Orishas of the Candomblé.”86
Sansone, personal communication (January 17th, 2024)
As the name of this chapter may suggest, Verger’s legacy didn’t take singular way and his figure is still perceived differently around the world nowadays.87 While many Western scholars that arrived at the global South has strengthened the academic imperialism by looking at the North as the producer of theories and the South as the data provider,88 I claim that Verger’s legacy is showing the vice versa, due to his unique methods, theories and practice.
In his article, Alatas described academic imperialism as the “domination of one people by another in their world of thinking”. He emphasized that this type of imperialism doesn’t differ from its political or economic counterparts, since they all have monopolistic control over the flows and nature of the ones that have been imperialized. In other words, academic imperialism is the Northern annexation of knowledge production and epistemological liberty of the South.89
Cohen pointed out that academic imperialism is still active among scholars nowadays. Often, he described, foreigner researchers are arriving to the global South seeking to extract information from the locals, in favor of their personal goals, such as obtaining degrees or writing a book; which make it a colonialist approach in a sense. However, Cohen emphasized that Verger managed to overcome this approach, since his goals were equal or highly considering the locals.90
Due to his work, Verger gained over the years more admiration and recognition among the people of Brazil and West Africa, rather from global North intellectuals. In Bahia, he was considered by the locals as a “true brother – a white brother,”, to such an extent that Amado once said that he was seriously asked whether Verger was a real person or a Bahian folklore invention.91
86 Livio Sansone, personal communication, 17.01.2024
87 Peter Cohen, personal interview at FPV, 21.02.2024. See more: Angela Lühning, personal Interview at FPV, 15.01.2024. Araujo. Negotiating connections between Brazil and the bight of Benin. Seiderer. The legacy of Pierre Fatumbi Verger in the Whydah Historical Museum (Benin). Brivio, Notes sur le Culte des Orisa et Vodun. Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. 88 Lacin Oztig. (2022). The Global North/South Inequalities in the IR discipline: Some reflections and insights. Alternatives: Global, Local, Political, 47(2), pp. 123
89 Syed Farid Alatas (2003). Academic dependency and the Global Division of Labour in the Social Sciences. Current Sociology, 51(6), pp. 601.
90 Peter Cohen, personal interview at FPV, 21.02.2024.
91 For both quotations, see: Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp.136.
The Bahian artist Negrizu met Verger in the late 1970s, when Brazil’s Military dictatorship was in power. He stated that then “racism and oppression of the Afro-Brazilian was at its peak”. However, Negrizu argued that Verger was an example of an alternative way to create human relations that “united the people”, referring to the repression of colored people in Salvador of that time, due to his modest and humanistic approach.92
After Verger’s passing, the Brazilian newspaper Folha do S. Paulo shared respect to his memory by publishing articles over his work, including a page of his portrait photo (figure 16),93 while simultaneously “in France his passing went almost unnoticed.”.94 Moreover, in a movie about the life of Mestre Moa, capoeira tutor and famous Bahian cultural figure, he sang a song that he wrote about Verger.95 Below are the original lyrics in Portuguese and the translated version in English:
♫ Babalaô, the mister who knows the secrets of the world,
Xangô brought you here
with no more than a gaze
[…]
Hey, Verger
The holy Bahia happily praise you Hey, Verger [x4]
Feed the African roots from here Hey, Verger [x3]
May Ifá’s magic blesses your Ori. ♫
♫ Babalaô, o senhor que conhece os segredos do mundo,
Foi Xangô quem te trouxe
num sopro de olhar
[…]
Ê Verger,
a Bahia sagrada te exalta, feliz. Ê Verger [x4]
Alimente a raiz Africana daqui. Ê Verger [x3]
Que a magia de Ifá abençoe seu Ori. ♫
92 Negrizu, personal interview at FPV, 16.01.2024.
93 Mario Cravo Neto. (1996, February 18). O filho do trovão. Mais!. 94 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp. 128.
95 Filipe Machado & Gustavo McNair. (2023). MÔA, RAIZ AFRO MÃE [DVD].
On the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, Verger got immense respect among the people he met in Africa. The King of Sakété in Benin said about him: “Fátúmbí was no outsider here; he was 100% Sakétéan. He stayed with the people; he did everything with the people. He knew all the secrets of Sakété and all the cults. He proved his fidelity with everyone,”, and the king of Oshogbo in Nigeria affirmed this sensation by saying that Verger “was part of the family.”.96
Figure 16 – Verger’s Obituary homage.97
In her article, Araújo stated that since most of his scholarly work wasn’t translated into English, Verger stayed an unfamiliar figure among English-speaking academic circles.98 While agreeing that his work is still not known sufficiently in the Anglophone academic world, I claim that the reason is profoundly different. During his life, at least 25 of Verger’s original works were either published or translated into English – unarguably, enough publications to gain wide academic esteem.99
96 For both quotations, see: Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp.136. To grasp Verger’s highly appreciated figure in Bahia and Africa, see: A Fieldwork Agenda of Communion, in Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist.
97 Folha de S.Paulo (1996, February 18). O filho do trovão. Mais!
98 Ibid. Negotiating connections between Brazil and the bight of Benin. pp. 114.
99 Lühning. (1998). Pierre Fatumbi Verger e sua obra. Afro-Ásia, Salvador, n. 21-22,
Thus, I argue that his unique methods and rebellious rejection to Western discipline of knowledge production were more likely to be the reasons for his neglection in the world of English-speaking intellectuals. The following quote demonstrates the radical distinctive approach Verger had, compared to other Western scholars:
“While most social scientists arrive in the field armed with years of academic training and specific research objectives, in Verger’s case it was the other way around – his field experience led him into academia. Participant-observation was for him not a tool, but an end in itself.”100
In his article, Rosa claimed that many global South intellectuals are imposing Western theories in their countries of origin, which helped to strength the academic imperialism. He argued that plenty of social scientists from the South do not prioritize endogenous forms of knowledge production but rather are avoiding being in the field. Therefore, Rosa argued, many Southern scholars are promoting the ideas of the global North, while they are preventing the development of local epistemological theories in the South.101
I suggest that Verger’s legacy indicates the opposite of Rosa’s analyzation. Even though he was born in Paris and worked most of his life in the global South, Verger adopted the nature of the people he lived among in Brazil and Africa. His publications, as researcher and photographer, functioned as a bridge between diverse viewers, and managed to emphasize cross-cultural unity, while maintaining mutual respect. Moreover, his stubborn approach that promoted local endogenous knowledge, has helped to the development of independent thinking flows in Africa and Bahia.102
In his article, Green highlighted that “when theory meets practice, practice usually wins.”103 Verger’s methodological approach was described by Brivio as “radically different” compared to the academy mainstream, since he favored observation over questions, practices over words, and he preferred begin in the field rather than to stay distant.104 The following quote of Verger can demonstrate his strong antagonistic approach towards Western academy:
100 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp. 135.
101 Marcelo Rosa. (2014). Theories of the south: Limits and perspectives of an emergent movement in Social Sciences. Current Sociology, 62(6), pp. 862.
102 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 92.
103 Toby Green. (2019). North-South Dynamics in Academia. Journal of African Cultural Studies, 31(3), pp. 281. 104 Ibid, Notes sur le Culte des Orisa et Vodun. pp. 282.
Ethnologist or Anthropologist, what awful words! You don’t study people; they’re not minerals or insects. I am fascinated by people because I love them. I meet them not to study, but to learn.”105
Brivio noted in her article that during his life Verger has lost the support of most Northen-based academy, especially after his initiation to Ifá in 1953. However, she argued, Verger simultaneously gained the respect of African people and religious leaders. As shown in her article, his empathic engagement and close ties with the people he lived among has made some scholars to renounce his work.106
Figure 17 – Verger somewhere in Nigeria (1952).107
Brivio emphasized that the rejection from Western academy appealed to Verger, and he was actually “proud of his marginal and liminal position.”.108 Verger’s abhorrence feelings towards academic knowledge production can be understood from his following quote:
“[W]e live in a veritable civilization of parrots. We blindly repeat texts that have been published. If someone writes a piece of junk, it is more or less certain that that piece of junk will be repeated and amplified. And because it was accompanied by references, page numbers, and editors’ names, [such a citation looks] very serious and erudite. And it becomes very difficult to refute later.”109
105 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp. 145.
106 Ibid, Notes sur le Culte des Orisa et Vodun. pp. 281-282.
107 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
108 Ibid, Notes sur le Culte des Orisa et Vodun. pp. 281-282.
109 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp. 142.
In 1966 Verger obtained his third cycle doctoral from Sorbonne University in Paris, without ever attending an academic class.110 He submitted his thesis, supervised by Paul Mercier, on the slave trade between the Bight of Benin and Bahia from the 17th to the 19th centuries. The manuscript of 1440 pages was based on his experiences on both sides of the Atlantic and deep archival research. Araujo argued that in 1972, once Verger received all his official academic titles, he realized that he won’t be able to enjoy the privileges of his position, due to his elderly age. This may explain why in the same year Verger wrote a letter to Denis Dohou, Director of the Ouidah Historical Museum, in which he signed as “ex-researcher” and renounced all his academic titles in a similar way.111 On another occasion, Verger provocatively said:
“That’s right, I have become a true conformist. I seek Yoruba titles and honors while I have nothing but contempt for those that I might obtain from my own social milieu.”.112
Verger strongly criticized theory-driven research since he thought that most academics have the desire to confirm the ideas that they had before starting their research. In addition, he objected to the idea of scholars arriving in the field with limited time and restricted research funding, since they are obliged to find answers faster than possible. Finally, Verger strongly opposed to the publication of articles in languages that the local societies won’t understand, and therefore won’t be able to refute or validate the conclusions.113 Lühning outlined it:
“Fatumbí was one of a rare but essential breed in the world of science: he demonstrated that it is both possible and necessary to do research not just with the head, but also with the heart […] His empathetic research unquestionably led him into approaches and styles that were highly unusual and innovative. Fatumbí’s life and work is simply human, as much in its origin as in its application, its essence and its medium.”.114
Thus, I claim that Verger’s unique working approach was tackling epistemological theories from a North-South perspective, and perhaps even was the cause to the neglection of his legacy among some scholars in the North-based academy. As Baradel claimed: “Verger was a man ahead of his time, but even today his approach is not yet to be widely accepted.”.115 Corresponding with that, Rodriguez stated:
“[Verger’s] work stands in contrast with the White, Western, Catholic and colonial approach to representation that was based on an idea of intellectual, political, religious and ethnic superiority, and of heterosexuality and exoticism.”116
110 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp. 146.
111Araujo. Negotiating connections between Brazil and the bight of Benin. pp. 121.
112 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp. 134.
113 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp. 142.
114 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 93.
During his life Verger created a substantial legacy, most of it was produced at or for the people the global South. He worked in abundance together with non-Western universities, intellectuals and publications. Lühning wrote about this deep engagement; in the 1950s Verger became an Associated Member at the University of Ibadan (Previously known as University College Ibadan), later he worked for the Department of Antiquities of the Nigerian government, and he also maintained close relation with the Nigerian Historical Society. Furthermore, Verger collaborated with the Extra Mural Department of University of Ibadan, the first ever university of Nigeria. Between 1976 to 1979 he was hired as a visiting professor at the University of Ile Ifé, today known as Obafemi Awolowo University.117
Figure 18 – Banaue, Philippines (1937/38).118
In 1979 Verger was accused by some Nigerian lawmen that he robbed and smuggled out of the country the head of Olokun, a bronze sculpture from the ancient Yoruba city of Ifé. He was arrested for a couple of days, just for an official examination to detect that the piece, which was located in the house of his friend, Carybé, in Salvador, was a plaster replica of the original sculpture.119
115 Alex Baradel, personal Interview at FPV, 15.01.2024.
116 Rodriguez. Pierre Fatumbi Verger United States of America. pp. 22.
117 Angela Luhning. (2022). Um fotógrafo antropólogo: trajetórias transatlânticas de Pierre Fatumbi Verger. pp. 14-16. 118 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
119 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 88.
After this harsh experience, Verger never returned to Nigeria but rather established more profound connections with the Federal University of Bahia (UFBA). Prior to that, in 1975, he was hired by UFBA to create the collection of artifacts for the future planed Museu Afro-Brasileiro (MAFRO) in Salvador. Supported by the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Verger acquired a large part of the pieces that are still displayed in the museum today. Thanks to his position in MAFRO, Verger was incorporated into the staff of UFBA, but he wasn’t carrying out lectures at the university. At the same time, from the 1980s onwards, he focused on publishing some of his most important books in Portuguese together with Corrupio Edition House, an all-female independent publisher from Salvador.120
Figure 19 – Verger in Cotonou, Benin (n.d).121
Besides his photographic and scholarly work in the global South, Verger took crucial part in the foundation of the MAFRO and cultural space of Casa do Benin in Salvador. Additionally, he helped organizing the Vodun festival “Ouidah 92” and the Ouidah Historical Museum in Benin.122
120 Luhning. Um fotógrafo antropólogo. pp. 17-18.
121 Photo Pierre Verger © Fundação Pierre Verger.
122 Ibid. Negotiating connections between Brazil and the bight of Benin. pp. 132. See more: The legacy of Pierre Fatumbi Verger in the Whydah Historical Museum (Benin). pp. 296.
Rodriguez highlighted-that Verger’s work was important to such an extent that it was assisting to the increase of international exchanges between Brazil and Africa.123
In 1988 Verger established “Fundação Pierre Verger” in his home, located in the working class neighborhood Engenho Velho de Brotas, in Salvador. After his death, the foundation has extended into “Espaço Cultural Pierre Verger” that functions as educational and cultural hub for the people of the area.124
To conclude Verger’s legacy chapter, I recalled one personal experience I had in Salvador: while walking in the city, I have encountered an elderly man that wore a T-shirt featuring one of Verger’s photographs. I approached and complimented him on his shirt, so he asked me if I knew the artist. I replied: “Yes! It’s Pierre Verger,”, so he answered:
“You are right, he took that photo. Pierre Verger, Jorge Amado, Carybé… What a wonderful generation… they did so much for Bahian culture… I was born here in Salvador, but Verger… this man… he was more Baiano than me…”.125
Finally, I want to emphasize that the vast respect that Verger is rightly obtaining in Bahia and Africa can also indicate a sensation of idolism that created around his figure. As Sansone said: “Verger became to be like a God in Salvador.”.126 This might be dangerous since his work won’t be looked critically enough by local scholars and artists.
To sum up this chapter, I strived to show that Verger’s approach was innovative, grounded, connected and different from other scholars of his time and even today. In the subtext of this chapter, one can understand my attempt to suggest that Verger’s highly considering methods were that unique, to the extent that I argue that contemporary African Studies academics should learn from his approaches. The acknowledgment of his legacy, methodology and practice are much needed to understand better the dynamics between the North and South from a perspective of knowledge production and human relation in the fieldwork.
123 Ibid Pierre Fatumbi Verger United States of America. pp. 23.
124 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger: a view from Bahia. pp. 76-89.
125 Personal occasion, 19th of December 2023.
126 Livio Sansone, personal communication, 17.01.2024
Conclusion
“You already know enough. So do I. It is not knowledge we lack. What is missing is the courage to understand what we know and to draw conclusions.”127
Lindqvist, Exterminate All the Brutes (1992)
In this article I attempted to demonstrate that Verger’s unique working methods were an example of the trajectory of his life. I argue that his legacy manifests an important lesson to researchers from a global North-South power relation and knowledge production perspective. In his article about global dynamics in academy, Green underlined that: “old patterns cannot work to solve new and ever more intractable problems. New patterns are needed.”128
Thus, Verger’s approach towards the people of Bahia and Africa, which often were the subjects of his photography or scholarly work, is an example of shifting a theory of equality and consideration into practice. I claim that his legacy indicates that there is an alternative to the current approaches in which academical research is often made. As Cohen noted:
“Verger’s career clearly raises questions about the criteria by which a researcher acquires legitimacy and by which anthropological knowledge is produced. Furthermore, despite his unusual professional history and antagonistic position towards Western academia, Verger’s personal statements convey a clear and consistent theoretical and methodological position, which can be perceived in virtually every aspect of his knowledge production process; from the relationship to subjects in the field to the presentation of data.”129
This claim has additional validity considering Verger’s background as a white man that was born to a privileged family but dedicated his life to promote the values and nature of the people in the global South. Therefore, unlike most Northen scholars that worked in the South, Verger gained tremendous respect among the people he lived among in West Africa and Brazil. As Baradel pointed out: “Verger’s legacy is a symbol of meeting point: it shows how diverse people can meet and coexist together, with mutual respect to each other.”.130
127 Sven Lindqvist. (1996). “Exterminate All the Brutes” One Man’s Odyssey into the Heart of Darkness and the Origins of European Genocide. (J. Tate, Trans.). The New Press. pp. 2.
128 Green. (2019). North-South Dynamics in Academia. pp. 283
129 Ibid. Pierre Fátúmbí Verger as Social Scientist. pp. 134.
130 Alex Baradel, personal Interview at FPV, 15.01.2024.
Finally, in a personal meeting with Moshe Morad, an Israeli researcher that worked extensively in the global South, we spoke about global dynamics, fieldwork in the South, the nature of academic work and about Verger. Morad pointed out that one of the toughest challenges for a researcher to do is to make sure that the people in the fieldwork, even if they are outside of his/her social and cultural world of origin, won’t feel like they are others, different or exotics.131
Corresponding with that, I argue that this was one of Verger’s most profound virtue as a photographer, researcher and above all as a person – he never made the others to feel like they were others.
131 Moshe Morad, personal meeting at Tel Aviv, 26.09.2023.
Acknowledgment
I want to dedicate a very special thanks to the entire staff of Fundação Pierre Verger for hosting me in their working space, Verger’s old home, that became my second home. A special thanks goes to Alex Baradel, Alexandre San Goes, Angela Lühning and Guilherme de Aragão from the foundation. Alexandre, with his professional eyes and wise feedback, was the one that helped me to choose which photographs would be featured in this paper and for this I am very thankful.
The foundation’s staff helped me throughout my research, scientifically and emotionally, to get to know Verger’s figure and stay positive while I am away from home. It’s important to mention that they never prevented me from asking tough questions or raising criticism when necessary.
Moreover, I would like to thank the four interviewees that dedicated their time and wisdom to help me to comprehend Verger better: Alex Baradel, Angela Lühning, Negrizu and Peter Cohen. Finally, I show great gratitude to Dmitri van den Bersselaar from Leipzig University for his support before my travel to Brazil, but also since he was the first one to introduce me to the work of Verger.
On a personal note, my half-year in Brazil was particularly hard time for me due to the breakout of war on October 7th, 2023, in Israel-Gaza. Throughout the research a dreadful feeling accompanied me, due to the concerns for my family, friends and all affected people in the region that I was born and grew up. Thus, this article is dedicated to my family and friends in Israel, and to all the innocent people who lost their lives during this horrible war. You were on my mind at every moment of creating this paper and I am wishing for better days to come.
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