Journey of Hope Fall 2015 | Page 31

LITERACY IN A BOX EDUCATING A WHOLE COMMUNITY BY CHRISTEL CHVILICEK O ne and a half billion people visited public libraries in the United States in 2014, according to the National Library Association. It’s easy to take our access to libraries for granted. For most, it takes only a quick trip by car or bus to get there; some people can walk. But imagine that you are living in the remote, rugged, and barren wilderness of Afghanistan’s Wakhan Corridor. In this thin panhandle, bordered by Tajikistan in the north, China in the east, and Pakistan to the south, learning to read and write can be a struggle. With limited resources and families to feed, schooling and literacy often take a back seat to the everyday struggle for survival. While Central Asia Institute (CAI) cannot put food on the tables of everyone in the region, we can do something about the limited resources for literacy and education. In an effort to help newly literate individuals, CAI plans to purchase “mobile libraries” from the Box Library Extension program of the Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University (ACKU). “These are libraries in a box, the books being housed in purpose-built metal boxFALL 2015 es, which open to reveal shelves of books,” says Dr. Sandra Cook, CAI board member and former co-chair of the foundation that helped fund and build ACKU. “The books are written to the level of a person who is newly literate. Once people have learned to read, they then need something to read.” Each mobile library contains 500 books, focused on subjects that affect people’s