Checking Out Tomorrow's Library
In Paris, an International Working Group Shows Off the
Prototype For a Multilingual 'Intellectual Cathedral'
of Digitized Knowledge

By 
John Ward Anderson

Washington Post Foreign Service 

PARIS, Oct. 17 -- As ideas go, they don't come much
bigger: Digitize the accumulated wisdom of humankind,
catalogue it, and offer it for free on the Internet
in seven languages. 

The first phase of that simple yet outlandishly
ambitious dream is about a year away from being
realized, according to a group of international
librarians,
computer technicians and 
U.N.
 officials who unveiled a prototype for the project,
called the World Digital Library, in 
Paris
 on Wednesday. 

Its creators see it as the ultimate multilingual,
multicultural tool for researching and retrieving
information about knowledge and creativity from any
era or place. The WDL Web site ( 
http://www.worlddigitallibrary.org
) will provide access to original documents, films,
maps, photographs, manuscripts, musical scores and
recordings, architectural drawings and other primary
resources through a variety of search methods. 

"The capacity to search in the various ways that will
be possible in the World Digital Library will promote
all kinds of cross-cultural perspectives and
understanding," said 
James H. Billington
, the Librarian of Congress, who proposed the project
two years ago. The ability to cross-reference
information pulled from "the deep memories" of
cultures
is "an exciting frontier possibility for the world,"
he said in an interview. 

"In essence, what they are doing is building an
intellectual cathedral, and it may never get
finished," said 
Paul Saffo
, a long-time 
Silicon Valley
 technology forecaster. "But this is a good effort
even if it fails, because it is going to inspire a lot
of other efforts, and if it succeeds it will be
a wonderful resource." 

"The challenges here aren't technological," Saffo
said. Financial hurdles might be considerable, and the
project could be criticized as too grandiose, or
its model might be considered too closed. But all
those problems will probably be resolved, he said.
"For me, the issue is the will to make it happen.
The people involved in this -- will they really see
this through?" 

With entrenched interests starting to gain control of
the Internet, he added, "it seems like the right thing
at the right time, and the most important thing
is that we try to do it." 

The prototype introduced Wednesday allowed searches by
time, geographical location, topic and format, with
the ability to narrow results by limiting them
to books, photographs, movies or recordings. For
written materials, the same content was simultaneously
available in seven languages, and expert analysis
by site "curators" was either translated or available
in subtitles. 

"If you really, truly want to understand and respect
other cultures, you have to be able to access their
materials in their own languages," said Ismail
Serageldin, head of 
Egypt
's Bibliotheca Alexandrina, one of the partners in the
project. A key goal of the WDL is to make the site
user-friendly and widely available, he said, to
help break down the digital divide between rich and
poor countries. 

The different search techniques permit a user to
retrieve information for certain years and countries,
so that in addition to being able to browse the
collected
knowledge of the world in the 1400s, for instance, a
user could also limit a search to a topic such as art
in Egypt and 
China
 in the 3rd century 
B.C. 

Similarly, a user could specify a medium -- for
example, only photographs from 
New York
 and Paris in the 1920s. 

"The memory of different cultures is preserved in
different ways," Billington explained. "This is an
attempt to take the defining primary documents of a
culture" and make them interactive with other
cultures, he said. 

The site "has an enormous educational potential,"
Billington said, noting that its content is being
designed particularly with children in mind. "It has
the capacity both to inspire respect for other
cultures and their histories and stories, but at the
same time to establish critical thinking." 

The WDL is being developed by the 
Library of Congress
 in partnership with the 
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization
 (UNESCO), which officials said would broaden the
program's reach and appeal. 

The general model for the WDL is the Library of
Congress's National Digital Library Program, which was
launched in the mid-1990s. That program's flagship
is the American Memory Web site ( 
http://www.memory.loc.gov
), which offers 11 million digital files culled from
U.S. historical records -- from the Declaration of
Independence and Civil War photographs to early

Thomas Edison
 movies and recordings of interviews with former
slaves. 

Billington said the United States was offering its
experiences in creating American Memory as a guide to
help the 190 other member states of UNESCO explore
and digitally archive their own national and cultural
memories for the WDL. The site will be accessible in
the six official languages of the United Nations
(English, French, Spanish, Chinese, Russian and
Arabic) plus Portuguese. 

The WDL will begin offering content on its site in
late 2008 or early 2009, Billington said, with the
ability to "rapidly ramp up" as countries digitize
their archives and make them available. The site will
have a few hundred thousand items to begin with,
officials said. 

The Library of Congress holdings, which include
millions of items from around the world, will form the
backbone of the initial WDL collection, with other
digital content provided by six other libraries,
including the national libraries of Egypt, 
Brazil
 and 
Russia. 

The start-up cost of American Memory was $60 million,
about $45 million of which came from private sponsors.
WDL officials could not estimate how much it
would cost to fully fund the creation of their site,
but they said they hoped much of the money would come
from private sources. 
Google
 gave $3 million to launch the project and develop the
prototype displayed Wednesday. 

The United States has often been criticized,
particularly here in 
France
 and in the developing world, for its dominance of the
Internet and for the global spread of its culture. But
WDL officials called the project an example
of how the United States could use its vast resources
and know-how to bridge those differences. 

"This is the best counter to that view of the U.S. . .
. muscling its way in and forcing other countries to
do what it wants," said Serageldin, the Egyptian
library head. "The Library of Congress is the biggest
library in the world by far, and it has stretched out
its hand to invite partners from all over the
world to participate. This is a wonderful way to show
how true U.S. leadership is being exercised by a great
cultural institution and bringing about a
wonderful reaction from everybody." 


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