Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Cape Town fire damages 'irreplacea­ble' archives

The University of Cape Town's Jagger Reading Room has been gutted by a blaze. The loss of invaluable documents casts a spotlight on digitizing history.

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A wildfire that started on Sunday on the slopes of South Africa's Table Mountain has destroyed, among others, the University of Cape Town (UCT) campus, ravaging its historic library that housed a priceless African Studies collection described as "unique in the world."

For years, local and foreign academics, students, and researcher­s have flocked to the university's Jagger Reading Room to gain valuable insights and knowledge through its astounding collection of works pertaining to the African continent.

"If you see inside, everything is gone. There's nothing left, all the books, the history, all gone. It's going to take a long time to rebuild it. I think the main thing is the history," Shurud Jacobs, a caretaker who has worked at the university for more than 10 years, told DW.

Loss beyond imaginatio­n Previously known as the J.W. Jagger Library, it was constructe­d in the 1930s and named after John William Jagger, an English-born businessma­n who served as Minister of Railways and Harbor in the cabinet of former prime minister, Jan Smuts.

The library's African Studies

collection consists of around 65,000 volumes, 26,000 pamphlets, 3,000 African films, and 20,000 other audiovisua­l items. Some of these are very rare.

Some works were published from as far back as the 1500s to the present. Written in multiple European or African languages, they include newspapers, maps, anti-apartheid works, activist pamphlets, graduate theses, film and audio. The specialist book collection­s include a Kipling and an Antarctic collection.

Notably, even documents of transition­s to independen­ce of some of the other African countries form part of this collection.

"An African continent, which has suffered several series of conquests, has been struggling to reconstruc­t its own history and particular­ly that which is documented," historian and political analyst Somadoda Fikeni told TV news broadcaste­r Newzroom Afrika. "Therefore, any special collection that is frail, no

longer available, or no longer printed very often tends to be priceless in terms of its heritage value and in terms of the knowledge project."

Could be the something new'

'genesis of

The library has yet to determine the scale of the devastatio­n, according to the UCT Libraries executive director, Ujala Satgoor.

The institutio­n's fire detection system did trigger fire doors, which presumably saved many of the most precious records stored at the library's lower levels. The floor razed by the flames however also held vast collection­s of literature and records that are now presumably lost.

She also told Newzroom Afrika that some of the materials were already being digitized, adding that the library had been purchasing duplicates of some documents over the past 10 years that were housed in its

General Section.

"We do have the basis of rebuilding this African Studies collection. But the materials that are salvaged (from the fire) will have to go on a proactive digitizati­on initiative," Satgoor said, however adding that "the magic, the beauty, of working with a tangible hard copy for researcher­s is invaluable."

Describing the fire as "a quirk of fate," she says that it now forces a serious rethink of how to rebuild the collection and develop it further in different areas within the context of new politics that's emerging across the continent.

"And so, in all of this sadness and horror, there is the opportunit­y, the genesis of something new to look forward to," she said.

Losing voices from the past For many academics and researcher­s, the African Collection offers a window into the continent's colonial past.

In an interview with The Conversati­on, UCT academic Shannon Morreira described the fire as "a terrible thing because you lose voices from the past which may carry alternativ­e histories."

She explained how archives are significan­t for countries like South Africa that have had "fraught and contested histories, or countries whose histories have, for centuries, been told from a particular vantage point."

While underscori­ng that not all of the UCT's African Collection

has an "anti-colonial" stance, historian Somadoda Fikeni explained that it's a mix that gives students insight into the mind of the colonialis­ts.

"It gives us an opportunit­y to understand the life then, and interpret it within the new lenses of decolonial­ity," he explained.

De- romanticiz­ing special collection­s

Fikeni, however, raised a pertinent point about romanticiz­ing special collection­s or archives that are often tucked away in safe spaces, and inaccessib­le to the general public. Drawing parallels with widely available ancient works by for example, Greek philosophe­rs or the works of Shakespear­e, he said that this event raises the question of what constitute­s a "special collection."

"And how does it relate to a knowledge system that gives access to someone in a village with a smartphone or who is in Asia or in the wider diaspora? For, as long as this material is jailed in some basement with signs that say 'Do not touch,' then it says that it is both vulnerable to water and fire as well as ignorance."

army, said, 'Believe me, if you are talented in any way, go for it, because if you don't, when you get old like me all you really have are memories of your life,'" Jones told British GQ Magazine in March.

He went for it, and global fame followed in 1964 with his breakthrou­gh hit, "It's Not Unusual." Success eventually saw him rubbing shoulders with the likes of Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin, and yes, even Elvis Presley, who became a close friend.

'Tiger' to national

From treasure

Known for his chest-baring shirts, fainting female fans, and his brow-wiping antics onstage using amongst others, the knickers of said fans — and coupled with that unmistakab­le voice and raw magnetism — he eventually earned the moniker, "Tiger."

He once famously revealed that he had bedded up to 250 groupies a year in his heyday. Famous liaisons included Mary Wilson of The Supremes and former Miss World, Marjorie Wallace. His wife however stood by him, though she once reportedly assaulted him for his open indiscreti­ons.

After a career slump in the early 80s, his image was reinvented by his son Mark who began managing him in 1986. The latter's interventi­on saw Jones involved in high-profile collaborat­ions with amongst others, the Art of Noise for "Kiss," The Cardigans for "Burning Down the House," and Mousse T for "Sex Bomb."

He was knighted in 2006 by Queen Elizabeth for his "services to music" and six years later, became one of The Voice UK's longest serving judges, acquiring in the process a new generation of fans.

Earlier this year, he revealed that besides working out and watching his diet, he does inversion therapy to stay healthy. The treatment involves patients being suspended by upside down by the heels to stretch the spine and relieve back pain.

As he told The Guardian earlier this month, "The plan is very much for me to be on stage in 10 years' time, doing 'Sex Bomb.'"

 ??  ?? The Jagger Reading Room of the University of Cape Town housed many priceless archives that may have been destroyed
The Jagger Reading Room of the University of Cape Town housed many priceless archives that may have been destroyed
 ??  ?? The burning library on April 18: The blaze has been meanwhile extinguish­ed
The burning library on April 18: The blaze has been meanwhile extinguish­ed
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