Under Siege in Damascus, A Book Becomes A Person’s Best Friend

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

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The BBC recently published an interview with an activist-librarian working in the suburbs of Damascus, identified only as Ahmed:

under siege in damascus, a book becomes a person’s best friend
The BBC reporter asked “Ahmed” why — when there is no food, no electricty, and no safety from shelling or barrel bombs — would people want a library.

Ahmed answered:

Even if you are hungry, and you don’t have food, and you don’t have any supplies, you should be able to read, you should be able to learn, you should be able to educate yourself. So that you can develop your skills, develop your personality — and this is why books are very important in this time.

We have a saying that goes: During the seige, during the war, during all these dark times, the best friend for a person is a book. When you don’t have electricty, when you don’t have food, the book becomes a person’s best friend.

But why a library?

“When we started our revolution,” Ahmed told the BBC, “our aim was not to demolish things, our aim was to build things.”

So activists gathered the books for this library, housed in a four-story building, from people around the area. In many cases, they have been able to get permission. But in some cases, such as when a person is detained, they have gone in and harvested books that would otherwise be destroyed.

Yet the owner can always come back and claim the book:

Whenever we take a book, we write the name of that person on the book, so that the people would know that we’ve taken this book from that person, and in case the person wants to come back and take their book, they would know where to find it.

At the moment, Ahmed said, “we have 30,000 books in the central hall of the building, and we have 2,000 other books in the warehouse.” The building, he said, has been shelled several times, “to the extent that the top floor is almost completely destroyed.”

Also, when forces bomb the area, there is a great deal of pressure, such that shelves collapse and there’s dust everywhere. “It happens on a frequent basis.”

The books people read under siege, Ahmed said, are not so different than people read at other times. “We get a lot of requests for the book 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. We get a lot of requests for a book on the art of how to deal with people. And many people love the book The Alchemist.”

The library is open to all, but the hours are not great, Ahmed said. “Unfortunately, because the people who catalog the books are all revolutionaries…and they cannot be present all the time. So at the moment, it opens from 11 a.m. until 5 p.m.”

You can listen to the whole interview at the BBC website. Thanks to librarian Isabella Rowan for passing it along.

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