Gulf News

Nigeria’s first mobile library sparks a love for reading

Kids involved in the programme now speak and spell better in English

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Funmi Ilori once had a dream about creating the biggest library in Africa. Now she drives vans packed with books to poor areas of Lagos to help children discover a love of reading.

“Readers are what?” she asks about 15 youngsters, sitting on little plastic stools in a classroom in a small converted lorry.

“Leaders!” they shout back in unison.

One of Ilori’s iRead Mobile Library vans recently stopped at the Bethel primary school in the working class district of Ifako, in the heart of megacity Lagos.

Inside the school compound, slides and seesaws rust in the humid air. The head teacher, Ruth Aderibigbe, said her 200 or so pupils only have textbooks at their disposal. “Books cost a lot of money,” she said.

When iRead turned up at the school two years ago with its wide selection of books, from colouring books to children’s novels, plus a few for adults, she welcomed it in with open arms. “The children involved in the programme now speak and spell better in English,” she said.

Inside the van, a young boy aged about 10 held a copy of Half of a Yellow Sun, the internatio­nal best-seller by the Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.

The book has clearly been well-read: its spine barely held the pages.

Adichie last week became embroiled in controvers­y after a French journalist asked her during a visit to Paris whether there were any bookshops in Nigeria.

“I think it reflects very poorly on French people that you have to ask me that question,” she responded, going on to rue what she said was France’s racist and colonial view of Africa.

Ilori is aware of the row and understand­s why the question would offend. But she sees a wider problem and has dedicated herself to trying to resolve it.

“Public libraries are functional in Nigeria, well, at least in Lagos. But not many people maximise the use of them,” she said.

“We need to catch new readers from a young age. In rural communitie­s, there are children that have never held a book.

“I advocate for community libraries everywhere. Just as churches are springing up, libraries should be springing up.”

Ilori came up with the mobile library idea in 2013 and applied for funding from a Nigerian government developmen­t initiative.

The pitch was successful and landed her 10 million naira, which, with the exchange rate at the time, was the equivalent of about $60,000 (Dh220,350).

Now, thanks to the grant and sponsors, she has been able to take on 13 employees, buy 1,900 books and four vans. She visits four to six schools every day, organising reading workshops on evenings and at weekends for out-of-school children in slum areas with the help of volunteers.

The vans function like real libraries: children choose a book that they read at home, bring it back the following week and write a compulsory “review”.

Ilori says there’s something missing. “We need more African children’s books now,” she says.

As Adichie said in an interview published in The Atlantic in February 2017, the books she read as a little girl “and I think this is true for many other young children in countries that were formerly colonised, didn’t reflect my reality”.

 ?? AFP ?? Funmi Illori (left), who launched the mobile library project, talks to the children from Bethel Nursery and Primary school in Lagos about the importance of reading.
AFP Funmi Illori (left), who launched the mobile library project, talks to the children from Bethel Nursery and Primary school in Lagos about the importance of reading.

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