Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser
Readallaboutinitiative
Dear Editor,
Reading opened worldwide portals for me in my own childhood.
It allowed my imagination to soar and to travel to places beyond whatever situation I found myself in.
Reading is a great equaliser – it inspires us to meet our fellow humans and understand, empathise and enter landscapes we could never dream of experiencing in one lifetime.
Reading contributes to a better quality of life, impacts on our health, spirit, educational opportunities and well being; and it connects us to each other and our own humanity.
I have seen first-hand – through working with refugee children forced to travel and surviving alone, without family – what a transformational impact escaping into a book can have in helping them to keep hope alive in unimaginably unstable situations they should never have to face.
To hear a child laugh and reconnect to childhood in these harsh circumstances is life affirming.
It is out of this instinct that I created a magical story hive in my book Where
The River Runs Gold, where the children take refuge whenever they need to.
However, for millions of children across the globe, especially those displaced and living in war-torn countries, access to this story hive of books is closed to them.
I want every child to be able to reach for that book that brings them light. That’s why this World Book Day (Thursday, March 5) I’m supporting
Book Aid International.
Their fundraising efforts mean more children and young people will have access to books.
Every day I’m inspired by the stories children have to tell and being a part of
World Book Day means we can spread the enjoyment of reading even further.
Just £2 helps send another book, giving children the opportunity to read, learn and have fun.
The Book Aid International website
– www.bookaid.org – has plenty of exciting World Book Day fundraising ideas for schools and parents.
Whether you host a Big Booky
Breaktime, have a sponsored Read
A-Thon or run your own unique fundraising event, it will have a positive effect.
Sita Brahmachari, author, via email