Give priority to libraries Ian ON Sunday
By Ian McDonald
Stabroek News
March 21, 2004

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Many days I pass our National Library, and I never fail to bestow a silent blessing on those who work within its rooms quietly, rendering service of inestimable value. You cannot easily measure the huge impact on society of children being encouraged to love books and reading.

I have always loved libraries. Fifty-three years have passed since I went to Cambridge and first visited the Seeley Historical Library near the Senate House. In that library I spent some of the happiest hours of my life; I can still recall the special fragrance that wafted through those corridors of books - a mixture of book-stain, old ink, ancient shelves and the apples scholars brought to eat for lunch. On those quiet Autumn afternoons I first seriously embarked on that never-ending adventure which is the search for knowledge and the discovery of new opinion.

Libraries are where language is most honoured. And language, of all the arts invented by man, is by far the most precious. WH Auden's epitaph for his fellow poet WB Yeats tells the truth:

Time that is intolerant

Of the brave and innocent

And indifferent in a week

To a beautiful physique

Worships language and forgives

Everyone by whom it lives.

The semi-literate West Saxon kings of the 10th century thought books so precious that they stored them with the holiest of their relics. So will libraries always be holy places and librarians their hallowed keepers.

My only fear is that in time to come libraries may become repositories not of books but, as computers inherit the world, of databases. The thought that soon scholars and bibliophiles may be able to put whole libraries in their pockets and consult them on computer screens at home fills me with a grim dismay.

And yet I know it should not. Libraries must move with technology and the times. There must have been those who hated the paperback revolution and yearned for a time when books were vellum-wrapped and bound with gilded leather. And no doubt there were mediaeval Luddites, monks of the quill and the illuminated scroll, who tried to smash the first presses made by Gutenberg. But anything that promotes learning is immensely valuable and must be actively encouraged. I will never understand what a megabyte is, but if the technology involved will help fill a child's mind with knowledge then let the megabytes multiply in all the libraries, great and small.

Yet I truly cannot believe the age of the book will ever be over. Technicians should never assume that books are merely primitive databases, ignoring their aesthetic and emotional riches. A visual display unit can be a source of erudition but it leaves out the love of a book for the book's sake. The browsing in a book, the turning of the pages and the look and feel of them, the slight but satisfying crack of the spine are important as well as the text. There is no intimacy in a magnetic disc. A book still remains the most convenient package of pleasure, power, and enlightenment yet devised by man. And the cheapest way out of the poverty of existence - and out of the existence of poverty - is still, all over the world, good books.

But whether one is a computer buff and sees the future in terms of electronic databases, microfiche, audio cassettes and video tapes, or whether one is an irredeemable lover of old-fashioned books standing in their shelves, row on glorious row, the objective is the same: knowledge and peaceful entertainment for as many people as possible. And libraries will serve that purpose as they have done in every land from time immemorial. In our country, in our age, reading must be freely available to all. Open access to education, information, and literature as offered by public libraries is one of the keys to a civilized and democratic society. In the 14th century Lollards died for the right to read their own books in their own language.

Andrew Carnegie, founder of libraries in countries all over the world, including Guyana, wrote that "libraries are entitled to first place as institutions for the elevation of the masses of the people." That is simply another way of expressing the exhortation which urges "empowerment of the people." What better way to do this than by initiating a five-year programme to triple public library space, and the books to fill it and the staff to serve, in Georgetown and throughout the nation? Now that indeed would be a proud and fitting monument to mark Minister Kowlessar's term of office. Perhaps the extra money - relatively speaking a very small amount - can still be fitted into this year's Budget.