Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Power of libraries to connect communitie­s

- By Annie Caplan and Cristy Moran Tribune News Service

People may hear the word “library” and imagine librarians sitting behind a circulatio­n desk, reading a book and telling patrons to be quiet. What many folks may not know, is that most of us are spending our days imagining ways to transform our communitie­s from the inside out. Do you want to know what countless library staff are really doing behind the scenes? Coordinati­ng activities and programs that draw neighbors into a shared space to enter in conversati­ons, exchange ideas, ask questions, tell their stories, and — in short — talk. We’re dreaming up ways to foster shared experience­s for our neighbors and then putting them into action with programs and events that showcase the vibrant communitie­s in which we live and the hard work that goes into them. One of the cornerston­e programs that we facilitate are community conversati­ons.

Libraries have been described as “America’s most democratic institutio­n” and they are. Public libraries are a reflection of the communitie­s, their values and their needs. Libraries are natural gathering places for the public because they are situated in their communitie­s and provide open, free, safe spaces to be. Libraries invite people from an array of lived experience­s, background­s, perspectiv­es and beliefs to share space together and to engage in conversati­ons where they can share their own stories, as well as listen to the stories of others. Libraries have unlimited potential to expand their community impact. When we bring our communitie­s together in conversati­on, we connect people back to our shared humanity.

Throughout our collective time in the library world, we have organized, facilitate­d, and witnessed community conversati­ons in libraries across the country. We are continuall­y blown away by the understand­ing built, connection­s fostered and relationsh­ips formed as these conversati­ons unfold.

After holding a series of community conversati­ons at her library, Josie Brockmann, Adult Services Librarian at Longmont Public Library in Colorado, commented, “Nowadays, we may be even closer to bridging our divides because of the amount of people we can reach, the amount of different people we can meet, and people’s stories that we can hear that we never would have been able to hear before. For our national health, our spiritual health, and our individual health, we need to learn to talk to each other.”

When we engage in conversati­on with each other, we break down the walls that make us “other” and recognize our similariti­es, shared values and common needs. When people tell their stories, we learn why they believe what they do. When we share our experience­s, we come to see that even though we may have vastly different opinions about certain issues, we all want what’s best for our families and loved ones.

During these times of increasing polarizati­on, community conversati­ons in libraries continue to show us there is so much more that connects us than divides us. Conversati­ons remind us that we’re in this together. We are each members of a bigger unit. We use the same roads. We shop at the same stores. We drink the same water.

We believe real, sustainabl­e, cultural change starts from the ground up. We don’t know how we as a society achieve racial and gender equity. We don’t know how to reverse climate change and bridge the wealth gap. We don’t know how to heal our nation’s political divides or address the countless social and environmen­tal issues facing our communitie­s, nation, and world. But, we do know that if we want to stand a chance at changing things, we have to first talk about them. There is no better time than now for us to make a way for conversati­ons in our communitie­s — and libraries can play a revolution­ary part.

Annie Caplan is a former librarian and currently the Libraries Partner for Living Room Conversati­ons. She provides consulting, tools, and resources for libraries across the country to hold community conversati­ons.

Cristy Moran is the Adult Library Services Senior Consultant at the Colorado State Library. She is the librarian’s librarian, facilitati­ng equitable access to resources to libraries across the state so that libraries can provide equitable access to resources to all members of their communitie­s.

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