dear teachers,

Wishing you all 'Happy learning' on Saraswathi Pooja day today. Perhaps the
most important gift of learning we can give our students, is to make them
fall in love with books.... through our school library... read story below

".... Working and living in migrant farmworkers’ fields, the conditions
were pretty terrible. My parents were alcoholics, and I was beaten and
abused and neglected. I learned to fight with a knife long before I learned
how to ride a bicycle.

When you are grinding day after day after day, there’s nothing to aspire to
except filling your hungry belly. You may walk down the street and see a
row of nice, clean houses, but you never, ever dream you can live in one.
You don’t dream. You don’t hope.

When I was twelve, a bookmobile came to the fields. I thought it was the
Baptists, because they used to come in a van and give us blankets and food.
So I went over and peeked in, and it was filled with books. I immediately —
and I do mean *immediately* — stepped back. I wasn’t allowed to have books,
because books are heavy, and when you’re moving a lot you have to keep
things minimal. Of course, I had read in the short periods I was allowed to
go to school, but I’d not ever owned a book.

Fortunately, the staff member saw me and waved me in. I was nervous. The
bookmobile person said, “These are books, and you can take one home. Just
bring it back in two weeks.” I’m like, “What’s the catch?” He explained
there was no catch. Then he asked me what I was interested in.

The night before, an elder had told us a story about the day that Mount
Rainier blew up and the devastation from the volcano. So I told the
bookmobile person that I was nervous about the mountain blowing up, and he
said, “You know, the more you know about something, the less you will fear
it.” And he gave me a book about volcanoes. Then I saw a book about
dinosaurs, and I said, “Oh, that looks neat,” so he gave me that. Then he
gave me a book about a little boy whose family were farmers. I took them
all home and devoured them.

I came back in two weeks, and he gave me more books, and that started it.
By the time I was fifteen, I knew there was a world outside the camps, and
I believed I could find a place in it. I had read about people like me and
not like me. I had seen how huge the world was, and it gave me the courage
to leave. And I did. It taught me that hope was not just a word.

When I left, I went to vocational school, and I graduated with a
stenographer’s degree. Then, when Pierce County Library had an opening, I
applied and was hired. I got to spend thirty-two years helping other people
make a connection with the library. I have a deep, abiding commitment to
them. Libraries save lives.

read the rest of the article
brainpickings.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=13eb080d8a315477042e0d5b1&id=1c5e73bed9&e=ced67c99b1

regards, Guru
IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

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