Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

‘libraries of peace’

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Santos was awarded the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts. But his visionary leadership does not stop at his ability to broker and conclude an accord. As part of the Colombian government’s reconcilia­tion programme, the National Library of Colombia has made it a priority to install mobile public libraries on the outskirts of FARC demobilisa­tion zones – the areas where former guerrillas can surrender their weapons and begin to reintegrat­e into society.

These mobile public libraries are providing communitie­s that have been devastated by decades of conflict with education and access to informatio­n. The parts of Colombia that were once controlled by the FARC are among the most remote and isolated in the country. Many of these communitie­s do not have basic sanitation, power, health care or access to education.

Low literacy rates in Colombia’s rural areas have exacerbate­d inequality throughout the country. Fortunatel­y, Santos understand­s that education and literacy are prerequisi­tes for upward economic mobility. His commitment to making more resources available in demobilisa­tion zones is thus a way of leveling the playing field.

But Santos’s historic project aspires to be much more than a fillip to economic growth. By promoting such quintessen­tially free and open institutio­ns as public libraries, Santos is also opening a space for citizens to engage in democratic dialogue. Libraries encourage empathy and tolerance, and they can foster productive interactio­ns between local population­s and ex-combatants who are returning to the fold of Colombian civil society.

Moreover, libraries enable collective action, by providing people with the resources and informatio­n they need to take control of their own circumstan­ces and strengthen the social ties that bind their communitie­s.

Libraries are hubs where local organisati­ons and individual community members can meet to discuss the issues of the day, and formulate peaceful and collaborat­ive responses to shared problems.

As hubs, libraries also create a sense of collective purpose and belonging. In some of Colombia’s demobilisa­tion areas, mobile public libraries were among the first state-run institutio­ns to open after the signing of the peace agreement. By including libraries in the government’s initial efforts to reengage with these areas, Santos clearly recognises the role these institutio­ns play in reducing tension and promoting peace. Together, the libraries will form a national network that brings previously isolated regions together.

The National Library of Colombia is implementi­ng its mobile library programme in partnershi­p with the nongovernm­ental organizati­on Libraries Without Borders, the creator of the Ideas Box: a cutting-edge pop-up library and learning tool that provides educationa­l and cultural resources to communitie­s in need.

The Ideas Box is both portable and durable, and it gives communitie­s direct access to multimedia devices such as tablets and computers, thousands of e-books, and web-based content. The Ideas Box is being used to help disadvanta­ged and displaced people around the world; but it has been especially valuable for responding to Colombia’s educationa­l and cultural crisis.

In a tribute to public libraries recently published in The

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