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It’s more than just books: now is the perfect time to get back to the library

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Courtesy of Mychal Threets

I used to be a “library kid.” Nothing excited me more than visiting the branches in my city, rummaging through the “young adults” section, and escaping on the journey that a book could take me on.

Over time, the library began to be related to forced labor. College classes, study groups, and dreaded team projects made the library a spot to avoid.

Now technology has given us audiobooks and digital downloads that make the look of somebody holding a physical book seem avant-garde. However, as distant work, entrepreneurship, and even homeschooling change into normal, positive interest in libraries is returning. There have been calls on social media to swap your property office for a study corner at the library, support your local branch, and fall in love with page-turning again.

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Michael Trinity, also known on social media as Mychal the Librarian, has change into a guiding star in library advocacy and support. Hailed as the “Levar Burton of this generation,” Threets gained immense popularity for sharing the uplifting moments he experienced as a librarian in Fairfield, California, through Solano County Library. For students learning at home, the library was not only a classroom for Trójka, but in addition something more. “It has always been a safe space,” says ESSENCE.

Threets’ earliest memories of his “safe space” ultimately influenced him to change into a librarian. He began creating videos of his day by day interactions to meet people where they’re and remind them of the purpose of the library. He wanted to show everyone that each overlap even in today’s digitalized world.

“People don’t realize how much these two issues clash and that there is a digital divide in the world but not in libraries,” Threets says.

He added. “I think people have forgotten that the library is constantly growing, constantly improving.”

Libraries are free havens for books and a cornerstone of inclusive education. As Threets points out, chapters provide “free homework help, in person or virtually” to students who cannot afford tutoring, “free language courses,” and a few offer “free legal assistance” from lawyers who provide pro bono services.

Physical and digital libraries are the important sources of distant learning. Teachers use built-in programs and teaching tools that mechanically connect students with local departments.

Digital databases akin to Libby provide individual users with a nationwide network of libraries and catalogs at their fingertips. Readers can select a book and pick it up at their local branch, making a full circle of support.

Libraries receive funding from various sources, depending on the sort of branch and its location. Typical sources are local governments, donations, partnerships, grants and consumer levies.

As Threets takes his support to Washington, pitching a multimillion-dollar initiative to senators for funding, an Atlanta librarian Forrest Evans has an easy answer to keeping your doors open and your shelves stuffed with books for years to come.

“It’s money already spent. This is tax money already working for you,” says Evans. “So stay in the loop. This way you will be respected, seen and heard.”

Courtesy of Forrest Evans

Evans’ call for residents to use funds already budgeted is fueled by the rise of librarians and spaces vilified for providing historically accurate texts in the era of book bans.

“It’s now in over 20 states Senate bills criminalizing librarians and media professionals if they disseminate “harmful” materials, which is ambiguously unclear in the text of this law. “I am proposing a new federal charge that will amount to a $100,000 fine and will result in the revocation or termination of your license,” he says.

The same conservative and supremacist efforts are behind the erasure of Black history from textbooks and curricula across the country.

Location disparities in low-income areas, minority-serving departments, and on historically black colleges and universities (HBCU) campuses take many forms, akin to a scarcity of books, up-to-date support materials, and Black and brown media professionals who can create a supportive environment for readers of color.

“Not only is there no adequate funding to provide particularly undervalued and underserved institutions, organizations, or nonprofits that serve minorities or are founded by women, but they are not included in the conversation,” notes Evans.

He mentions that organizations akin to American Library Association (ALA), Black Caucus of the American Library Association (BCALA)and Georgia Library Media Association they fight to protect the rights of readers and librarians. But Evans says it’s ultimately up to the “individual professional” to advocate for the needs of his or her location.

“That’s why representation is so important,” he says.

The value of libraries is seen in the people they look after and the relationships they develop. Kayla Rayford, Aziza Kelly, Alex Brame and Denisha Cranfield met as students at Bowie State University. These 4, from different parts of the country and with different backgrounds, were united by their love of reading. Their digital book club, Black girls readingrepresents what libraries can cultivate.

Black girls reading

Kelly’s never-ending reading list, Rayford’s memories of her first library card that made her feel like she had “the keys to the world,” Brame’s summer reading program, and Cranfield’s science programs (memorably with the python) are small examples of how libraries can promote lifelong learning and finding opportunities between and beyond the sites.

“If you’re a library lover, you’re a book lover,” says the group’s co-founder, Cranfield. “I think the library will always be a place to find joy; you will be able to escape any reality that is thrown at you. As book lovers, I know that’s what we’re here for. Escapism. I think libraries are essential.”


This article was originally published on : www.essence.com

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