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March 2009
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Mobile Libraries Around the World
by Margriet Ruurs
Several years ago I read an article in The Vancouver Sun. It told of
how a camel was being used to deliver books to remote areas
near Garissa, Kenya. Reading the article made me realize that I had
been taking public libraries for granted. What luxury to be able to
walk into a large, well stocked library and take books home for free!
As a child, I devoured all of the books in my local children’s
library in The Netherlands until I was able to start using the adult
library. As a mother, I always took my children to public libraries
in Canada for story time and Summer Reading Club. Now I live in rural
Oregon and have access to a mobile library. Reading about unique mobile
libraries like a camel, made me curious: how do children around the
world get library books?
I didn’t know at the time that this question
would lead to much research and, subsequently, to a new book.
My Librarian is a Camel is the result of eight years of searching
the Internet, contacting professionals and volunteers around the world
via email in hopes of collecting their stories and photos. The process
was as exhilarating as it was sometimes frustrating. It has lead to
many new friendships and to ongoing support for libraries that need
help.
I found a remarkable lady in Lahore, Pakistan—Basarat Kazim—who
has been instrumental in obtaining a bus which functions as
a mobile library: Alif Laila, or Stories of 1001 Nights, brings
books to children around Lahore who would not otherwise have
access to books. Basarat Kazim also initiated an inner-city library
that is now being used by school children. I was fortunate enough to
be invited to work with teachers and students in Lahore and to see,
first hand, the impact her library is having. Young women are learning
to use computers, children listen to stories, there is space for crafts,
and much more. Alif Laila is a bustling, popular place to visit.
Through
the Internet and the help of a librarian at the National Library
of Mongolia, I made contact with Jambyn Dashdondog. As a Mongolian
writer, he has written and preserved many folk tales from his culture.
He works tirelessly to bring books and the joy of reading to
children in the Gobi Desert. “Books are sweeter than candy,” Dashdondog
says with a smile. With the help of a donated van, with camels
and wagons, he brings books to nomadic villages. His project
received the 2006 IBBY Asahi Reading Promotion Award.
I discovered
donkey libraries, book boats and librarians who bring books
to children by bicycle. Boyds Mills Press published My Librarian
is a Camel, which has since gone on to win several nominations and awards,
including IRA’s
Most Notable Book for Global Awareness. The book led to schools
in North America adopting library projects. The librarian in
Zimbabwe, for instance, told me that villagers are excited when the
donkey library arrives in their area. However, they only had twenty-year-old
textbooks to offer. Thanks to schools in North America collecting and
sending books, they now have colourful picture books and nonfiction
books for children.
My local Reading Council has donated many quality
books while a local Rotary Club made some funds available to
pay for postage. If your school is interested in helping to
bring books to others, please send me an email and I will send
you a list of addresses.
Another fun project that sprang from the book
is a global bookmark exchange. “A BOOK MARKS Our World” has
already connected thousands of children in over twenty countries.
The rules are simple: send me an email to tell me the number
of students participating and their ages. Then have students make handmade
bookmarks. They can decorate them any way they like but need
to write one sentence about their favourite book. I will send you a
contact elsewhere in the world to which you mail your bookmarks. You
will receive back enough bookmarks for each of your students.
Books are
simply paper and cardboard until readers bring them to life.
Using books with students is exciting; it can open their eyes
and their hearts to the world around them.
Margriet Ruurs is
the author of more than 25 books for children. Her next book
will be out in Spring 2009: My School is a Chicken Coop, How
Children Around the World Go to School.
Email: margriet@margrietruurs.com Website: www.margrietruurs.com
My Librarian is a Camel, ISBN 1-59078-093-0, Boyds Mills Press. |