Should books be a part of emergency relief efforts?
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Sure, disaster victims need food, clothing, and shelter during humanitarian emergencies 鈥 but books?
That鈥檚 what a new campaign is fighting for.
Books are 鈥渘ourishment for the mind鈥 and should be a critical part of emergency relief efforts after disasters like Hurricane Katrina, the Haitian earthquake, or the Indian Ocean tsunami occur, according to a literary-humanitarian circling the globe.
To date, more than 100 writers, intellectuals, literary groups, and public figures including four Nobel laureates and the humanitarian organization have signed The Urgency of Reading , which , 鈥淚n humanitarian emergencies, reading and writing are essential to healing and reconstruction.鈥
鈥淲hile there is no question that organizations and governments must devote the majority of their efforts to promoting the physical wellbeing of disaster victims, more attention should be given to nourishing the mind as a second measure to help victims cope with catastrophe and move forward,鈥 the petition .
Nobel literature laureates JM Coetzee, Doris Lessing, and Toni Morrison, along with Nobel peace laureate FW de Klerk and authors Jeffrey Eugenides, Junot Diaz, Michael Cunningham, Joyce Carol Oates, and Haitian-American writer Edwidge Danticat, are among those who have signed the petition. The campaign, organized by Libraries Without Borders, is challenging the UN and other international organizations to include 鈥渘ourishment of the mind鈥 as a fundamental post-disaster necessity.
鈥淭he first priority is life, but when life is secure, what can people do if they are staying in a camp?鈥 Libraries Without Borders chairman Patrick Weil told the UK鈥檚 newspaper. 鈥淭hey cannot do anything, and they can become depressed. Once life is secured, books are essential. They're not the first priority, but the second... They are so important. They're the beginning of recovery, in terms of reconnecting with the rest of the world, and feeling like a human being again.鈥
Weil told the Guardian that the first email Libraries Without Borders received after the Haitian earthquake was a request for books to reopen a destroyed library. Libraries Without Borders not only helped reopen the library, it sent an emergency mission to the disaster-struck country to distribute books and educational resources to displaced persons. The work Libraries Without Borders and other literary organizations did in Haiti were transformational, Haitian writer Danticat told the Guardian.
鈥淚 saw personally how much comfort books can bring to young people living in internally displaced camps and tent cities through my involvement with an organization called Li, Li, Li! where Haitian teachers and artists, who were sometimes displaced themselves, read books to children in the camps,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hough people were in a lot of pain and were suffering a great deal, they were able, for an hour or so, to find some comfort in the pages of a book. I have great belief in the power of words, written or read, to help us begin healing. I have experienced it in my own life and I have also seen it in action.鈥
That鈥檚 why Danticat and signatories like authors Dave Eggers, Marie Darrieussecq, Amin Maalouf, and Amelie Nothomb are challenging the UN to include 鈥渘ourishment of the mind鈥 in its disaster relief efforts.
鈥淟WB鈥檚 years of dedicated humanitarian assistance in Haiti and 20 other countries have demonstrated that books and educational opportunities for disaster victims are essential to healing, rebuilding society and recapturing lost humanity,鈥 reads The Urgency of Reading . 鈥...Today, however, the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, published by the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, do not include nourishment of the mind as a fundamental necessity in post-disaster zones. In order to challenge the United Nations and other international organizations to implement initiatives that respond to this need... Libraries Without Borders is launching this international call to action..鈥
Food, water, shelter, and health are 鈥渁bsolute priorities,鈥 the petition affirms, but 鈥渘ourishment of the mind,鈥 namely books, should be a second measure to help disaster victims cope and move forward.
It鈥檚 an intriguing idea 鈥 and certainly a provocative one. We鈥檙e eager to hear what you think: Are books a necessity during humanitarian crises? Would you sign this petition?
Husna Haq is a Monitor correspondent.