Portrait of Ahmed Zakaria and his wife. Copyright Rashid Photo Studio.
Portrait of Ahmed Zakaria and his wife. Copyright Rashid Photo Studio.

Rashid Photo Studio

Premiere for 'Hopes & Dreams' at Omdurman's national cinema. Copyright Rashid Photo Studio.
Rashid Photo Studio

The Al Rashid Studio in Atbara is the largest private photo studio in Sudan. The studio includes over four million negatives dating back to the 1940s of public, private and family events, as well as of local industry, politics and movements. Atbara was at the centre of Sudan’s railway industry and regarded as the cradle of the Sudanese trade union movement and of Sudanese communism.

The studio’s founder, Rashid Mahdi (1923-2008), was a Sudanese cameraman, film producer and director ,and a self-taught photographer. Following his graduation from the industrial school in Omdurman, he bought his first camera. Rashid Mahdi then returned to Atbara to establish his own studio and what was Atbara’s first photo studio in 1939, with his self-built ‘illuminate camera’ constructed of wood. Rashid Mahdi and his studio thrived and was continued by Amin El Rashid (1945-), son of Rashid Mahdi, up to the mid-1990s.

Amin El Rashid is passionate about preserving the studio’s collections, for both the studio’s legacy but also as a cultural heritage of Sudan, especially of the cosmopolitan city that was Atbara, and as a resource for researchers. For, as stated by Amin, ‘a country without a history is a country without a future’. Amin has been working with Sudan Memory since 2017 to record a large part of the studio’s archive.

What is presented here is a selection of scanned materials that showcases this collection. For more information on the collection, please contact the collection contributor.

Atbara, Sudan

Bint Haman accompanied by children and unidentified others

Mirghany Ageed giving a speech to his people

Batch 63, Industrial Schools Association House

After the Eid prayer at the Mawlid Square in the city of Atbara

Dr. Kabashi's children

The Head of the Council of Sovereignty, Ahmed Mohamed Salih, inspecting the movement and installation of an anti-aircraft cannon by the artillery personnel in Atbara.

A photograph of the son of Habeeb Basta

A photograph of Mufeeda Murgas

Shukri Ibrahim

The Egyptian irrigation on the Nile wth the engineer Abdel Fattah

Rashaad Mustafa and unidentified Sudanese male

A photograph of a young Sudanese man from the city of Atbara

A photograph of Ashraf Mohammed Ali

A photograph of Ahmed Abdallah

A photograph of the crowd celebrating the evacuation and independence. A banner reads: “The Popular Theatre Group for Acting and Music in Atbara. The people participate in its joys on the day of the evacuation and independence”. The declaration of independence came from within parliament on 19 December 1955. It was the day the uprising took as its day, until it toppled Omar al-Bashir and his regime.

A photograph of the police force of the Northern region, headed by Captain Ibrahim Hassan Khaleel

Mahdi Othman

Photograph of railroad engineers at the farewell gathering of their colleague

Ihsan Babiker

A photograph of the city of Cairo from Rashid Mahdi's visit

Citizen from the Yemeni community

A photograph of Chief Officer of the Atbara Municipal Council Merghani Abd Al-Noor

A photograph of the employees of the carpentry and railway mechanic workshops in Atbara

Functioning equipment inside Rasheed Mahdi's Institution of Cinematic Production

A photograph of Khidr Hamid

A photograph of a Sudanese female citizen from the Bani Amir tribe in eastern Sudan, who lives in the city of Atbara

Yourgini Ethiopian lady

Kamal Andrius' daughter and her spouse

Two young men from Southern Sudan

Asim Sied Ahmed

Note to user

Dear user,

In response to current developments in the web technology used by the Goobi viewer, the software no longer supports your browser.

Please use one of the following browsers to display this page correctly.

Thank you.