12 Ways Libraries Are Good for
the Country
Most Americans know what they can expect from a library. And
librarians know what it takes to provide comprehensive access to every recorded
detail of human existence. It takes support.
Libraries are ready when they are needed, ready to enrich
our minds and defend our right to know, just as other institutions protect our
safety and property. Without sound minds, however, the American dream of safe streets and secure homes will never be
fulfilled.
Libraries safeguard our freedom and keep democracy healthy.
To library advocates everywhere—Friends, trustees, board members, patrons, and
volunteers—American Libraries offers this gift of 12 ideals toward which
we strive. It will take all of us, in a spirit of pride and freedom, to
maintain libraries as a living reality in a free nation into the 21st century.
- Libraries
inform citizens. Democracy vests supreme power in the people. Libraries
make democracy work by providing access to information so that citizens
can make the decisions necessary to govern themselves. The public library
is the only institution in
American society whose purpose is to guard against the tyrannies of
ignorance and conformity, and its existence indicates the extent to which
a democratic society values knowledge, truth, justice, books, and culture.
- Libraries
break down boundaries. Libraries provide free family literacy programs for
low-literate, illiterate, and non-English-speaking people. In addition,
hundreds of librarians across America lead outreach programs that teach
citizenship and develop multilingual and multicultural materials for their
patrons. Libraries serve the
homebound elderly, prisoners, and other institutionalized individuals, the
homeless, and the blind and hearing-impaired.
- Libraries
level the playing field. Economists have cited a growing income inequity
in America, with the gap between the richest and poorest citizens becoming
wider year by year. By making all its resources equally available to all
members of its community, regardless of income, class, or other factors,
the library levels the playing field. Once users have access to the
library’s materials, they have the opportunity to level the playing field
outside the library by learning to read, gaining employment, or starting a
business.
- Libraries
value the individual. Library doors swing open for independent thinking
without prejudgment. Libraries offer alternatives to the manipulations of
commercialism, from the excellence of public-television productions to the
freethinking of renegade
publishers and the vision of poets and artists outside the mainstream
business of art and literature.
- Libraries
nourish creativity. In the library we are all children. By stimulating curiosity—parent to the
twin forces of creativity and imagination—even the most focused and
specialized library serves the purpose of lifting the mind beyond its
horizons. Libraries store ideas that may no longer work but can serve as
the raw material that, cross-fertilized in the innovative mind, may
produce answers to questions not yet asked.
- Libraries
open kids’ minds. Bringing children into a library can transport them from
the commonplace to the extraordinary.
From story hours for preschoolers to career planning for high
schoolers, children’s librarians make a difference because they care about
the unique developmental needs of every individual who comes to them for
help. Children get a handle on personal responsibility by holding a
library card of their own, a card that gives them access to new worlds in
books, videos, audiotapes, computers, games, toys, and more.
- Libraries
return high dividends. What do Gallo wines, the I Can’t Believe It’s
Yogurt chain, and billboard-sign giant Metromedia have in common?
Libraries made millionaires out of each of these companies’ grateful
owners by providing crucial start-up information when they were no more
than wannabe business titans. Libraries are there to help people with more
personal goals, too. The seed money expended for these and other success
stories? Less than $20 per capita per year in tax dollars.
- Libraries
build communities. No narrow definition of community will work in a
library. Each community has its libraries and its special collections.
Libraries validate and unify; they save lives, literally and by preserving
the record of those lives.
Community-building means libraries link people with
information. Librarians have
become experts at helping others navigate the Internet. Before there was
talk of cyberspace, there were libraries, paving the way for the superhighway.
- Libraries
make families friendlier. The American family’s best friend, the library,
offers services guaranteed to hone coping skills. Homework centers,
literacy training, parenting materials,
after-school activities, summer reading programs, outreach—like the
families they serve, libraries everywhere are adapting to meet new
challenges.
- Libraries
offend everyone. Children’s librarian Dorothy Broderick contends that
every library in the country ought to have a sign on the door reading:
“This library has something offensive to everyone. If you are not offended
by something we own, please complain.” This willingness and duty to offend
connotes a tolerance and a willingness to look at all sides of an issue
that would be good for the nation in any context; it is particularly
valuable when combined with the egalitarianism and openness that
characterize libraries.
- Libraries
offer sanctuary. Like synagogues, churches, mosques, and other sacred spaces, libraries can create a
physical reaction, a feeling of peace, respect, humility, and honor that
throws the mind wide open and suffuses the body with a near-spiritual
pleasure. But why? Perhaps it is because in the library we are answerable
to no one; alone with our private thoughts, fantasies, and hopes, we are
free to nourish what is most precious to us with the silent companionship
of others we do not know.
- Libraries
preserve the past. Libraries preserve the record; a nation, a culture, a
community that does not understand its own past is mired in its own
mistakes. Libraries enable us to communicate through distance and time
with the living and the dead. It is a miracle kept available by the
meticulous sorting, storing, indexing, and preservation that still
characterizes library work—work that will carry, in the electronic
environment, challenges and a price tag yet unknown.
Adapted from “12 Ways
Libraries Are Good for the Country,” American Libraries 26 (December 1995):
1113-19. © Copyright 2000 American
Library Association