Part 3: Interview with a Librarian
As I left the park, I ran into one of the librarians from the People's Library -- his name was Hristo and he was literally carrying a library around his neck. He was not allowed inside of the park (police rules) and was patrolling around the border instead, waiting for the current policemen's shifts to end. Apparently, the police had very random, mercurial attitudes about allowing the books inside the park, sometimes letting the librarians set up with books inside and sometimes barring them from entering at all.
Hristo was nice enough to take the time to answer some questions from me -- and soon from some other people who had gathered around. Below is a short video of him answering the question, "What does the People's Library mean to you?" (Transcript below the video, as well).
His answer:
"The People's Library is the free spreading of knowledge and information without having to have some sort of authority based on librarians, which is kind of weird, but in a normal library you have to get a library card, you have to go through a whole proccess. This library, all you have to do is take a book. And we ask that you don't let it sit in your bookshelf or just sell it to a bookstore, that you actually read it, spread the knowledge. Yeah, it's the best library in New York."
I loved what he said about the library being all about the free spreading of knowledge and information, but what I found a bit troubling was his categorization of librarians as a restrictive "authority." He explained what he meant in the video, of course, but the fact still remains that librarians are being viewed as "bouncers" -- as selective gatekeepers that create obstacles and boundaries for people in their community.
It just reinforced the idea that, as librarians, we still have a lot of work to do. Being a part of your community, involving yourself in social movements like Occupy and the People's Library, being aware and responsive to the issues your community is concerned about --- these are things we all can and should do.
I'm not saying that we all need to go out and protest until our voices burn out, but there is something that each of us can do to connect in some way to our communities.
Let's not be bouncers to this community club, let's be the DJs :)
In other words...Be radical: be a librarian!!
As I left the park, I ran into one of the librarians from the People's Library -- his name was Hristo and he was literally carrying a library around his neck. He was not allowed inside of the park (police rules) and was patrolling around the border instead, waiting for the current policemen's shifts to end. Apparently, the police had very random, mercurial attitudes about allowing the books inside the park, sometimes letting the librarians set up with books inside and sometimes barring them from entering at all.
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| (Thank you for the interview!) |
Hristo was nice enough to take the time to answer some questions from me -- and soon from some other people who had gathered around. Below is a short video of him answering the question, "What does the People's Library mean to you?" (Transcript below the video, as well).
His answer:
"The People's Library is the free spreading of knowledge and information without having to have some sort of authority based on librarians, which is kind of weird, but in a normal library you have to get a library card, you have to go through a whole proccess. This library, all you have to do is take a book. And we ask that you don't let it sit in your bookshelf or just sell it to a bookstore, that you actually read it, spread the knowledge. Yeah, it's the best library in New York."
I loved what he said about the library being all about the free spreading of knowledge and information, but what I found a bit troubling was his categorization of librarians as a restrictive "authority." He explained what he meant in the video, of course, but the fact still remains that librarians are being viewed as "bouncers" -- as selective gatekeepers that create obstacles and boundaries for people in their community.
It just reinforced the idea that, as librarians, we still have a lot of work to do. Being a part of your community, involving yourself in social movements like Occupy and the People's Library, being aware and responsive to the issues your community is concerned about --- these are things we all can and should do.
I'm not saying that we all need to go out and protest until our voices burn out, but there is something that each of us can do to connect in some way to our communities.
Let's not be bouncers to this community club, let's be the DJs :)
In other words...Be radical: be a librarian!!








