The Star Malaysia

The public library was never just about books

- By ADAM ECHELMAN Adam Echelman is the director of programmes for Libraries Without Borders.

FORBES recently published a piece by economist Panos Mourdoukou­tas arguing that Amazon.com stores should replace public libraries.

The backlash was rapid and unforgivin­g; library lovers from around the world responded with angry tweets, and Forbes removed the piece two days later. Yet the article highlights a concerning fact: Too many people misunderst­and the role of the public library.

The library is not a warehouse of books like Amazon, a tech developer like Apple or a cafe like Starbucks. It is a public institutio­n of learning predicated on the principle that everyone should be able to access informatio­n, education and culture free of cost. In practice, the unique mission of the public library leads to a distinct set of services, ranging from book-lending to computer – and language classes. The growing diversity of library activities is not a means of compensati­ng for the rise of the internet or a decline in the number of library users. Libraries have been reinventin­g their programmes for over a century to advance the same old mission: informatio­n for all.

It’s true that some people can gain the educationa­l and cultural resources they seek at for-profit venues. However, as library advocates point out, the quality and diversity of library events and educationa­l resources are rarely surpassed. Licensed librarians are available to curate books and online resources around any question a patron might ask. There are story-time events, job assistance resources for homeless people and citizenshi­p classes for recent immigrants.

But to compare the library to a bookstore or cafe is to miss the point. The existence of for-profit alternativ­es to some library services does not undermine the need for libraries, just like the existence of private attorneys does not diminish the importance of our public defenders.

For over a century, American libraries, for one, have mastered the craft of ensuring that everyone has access to the highest quality services in a free and open manner. Today, nearly every library provides free computer access and runs digital literacy classes. These services are not meant to compensate for waning interest in books or to compete with Amazon. Rather, public libraries provide free training and technology because the internet is a tool to access informatio­n even though that tool is distribute­d unequally in the US, where only 65% of Americans have broadband access at home, including 57% and 47% of blacks and Latinos respective­ly.

This summer, Libraries Without Borders, is working with the Providence Community Library in Rhode Island to bring legal informatio­n, Wi-Fi access, and library resources into flea markets, laundromat­s and housing developmen­ts. We know that too many families want to meet with a lawyer, study for their GEDs, or learn English but don’t know where to begin. Some lack the time to pursue these interests while others are simply unaware of existing services. The library is the first step to achieving these goals, but library services extend far beyond a building or the books inside it.

These outreach activities are emblematic of the decades of mission-driven work by public libraries across the United States. There are few systems as representa­tive of this fact as the Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore. In 1886, Enoch Pratt was opened with the intent to provide informatio­n to all regardless of race; in October that year, Harry S. Cummings was the first African-American to get a Pratt library card. In 1943, the library sponsored a horse-drawn bookmobile designed to travel throughout the city. During World War II, the Brooklyn Branch of Enoch Pratt served as an informatio­n bureau for Civil Defense, while operating a day care center for working mothers and hosting Red Cross meetings. And all these initiative­s? Done before the advent of the internet.

The value of a library is defined by its steadfast commitment to making informatio­n free and open to all. In that respect, there is no company or public institutio­n that could ever replace the library.

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