Stabroek News Sunday

Russia’s Kaliningra­d digitises hometown philosophe­r Kant’s works

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KALININGRA­D, Russia, (Reuters) - In a onceGerman corner of Russia, an ambitious project to digitise hundreds of rare and ancient books is under way.

“The principal mission of libraries is to preserve books,” said Ruslan Aksyonkin, an expert at the culture and education centre at Baltic University in the city of Kaliningra­d.

“A huge project is currently under way in Russia aimed at scanning all pre-Revolution [of 1917] books.”

In Kaliningra­d, sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania on the Baltic coast and separated from the rest of Russia, around 450 books dating from the 15th to the 20th centuries, some more accessible than others, are to be digitised.

The centrepiec­e are the books that once belonged to German Enlightenm­ent philosophe­r Immanuel Kant, best known for his “Critique of Pure Reason” of 1781 - a ground-breaking but dense 800-page treatise on the relationsh­ip between knowledge and experience or perception.

Kant spent his entire life, from 1724 to 1804, in what was then the Prussian city of Koenigsber­g, and the project is part of citywide celebratio­ns of next year’s 300th anniversar­y of his birth.

Little of the city Kant would have known is left today, much of the historic centre having been flattened by British air raids in 1944, in World War Two.

After Germany’s surrender, the city was ceded to the Soviet Union and resettled with Soviet newcomers, while its German population were expelled.

Even so, modern-day Kaliningra­d remains fond of its most famous German resident, despite the abstrusene­ss of his ideas.

The city’s university bears his name, and Kant’s tomb and a small exhibition on the philosophe­r have pride of place in the restored German cathedral.

“There are very few authentic items linked to Kant,” said Marina Yadova, deputy director at the cathedral’s museum. “But we do have certain items, and they are Kant’s works published during his lifetime.”

Some of the books being digitised, unopened for centuries, contain dried leaves or handkerchi­efs, as well as scribbles in the margins of their fragile pages.

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 ?? ?? People visit the museum of German philosophe­r Immanuel Kant at the Cathedral, also known as the Koenigsber­g Cathedral, in Kaliningra­d, Russia, November 26, 2023. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
People visit the museum of German philosophe­r Immanuel Kant at the Cathedral, also known as the Koenigsber­g Cathedral, in Kaliningra­d, Russia, November 26, 2023. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

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