When Steven Labarakwe walked into Norwood School's well-stocked Middle School Library last spring, he commented wistfully that his students have very few textbooks and no other books or libraries available to them. That conversation started the Books for Kenya initiative to get books in the hands of the students of northern Kenya. A couple of years ago, friends opened the first library in northern Tanzania with books donated primarily by the World Bank Book Project. Thanks to a Norwood grant, the Lower School Librarian and I were able to spend a couple of weeks helping set up the Mwika Community Library, so I had seen firsthand the impact that books from WBBP can have on a community. I promised Steven that I would ask if the Project could also help his students.
Sue Gail Spring logs book contributions (Photo: Young Kimaro) |
The World Bank Book Project collects books from schools and libraries around the Washington, DC area and then sorts, boxes, and ships them abroad based on a qualifying system that takes about 3 years to complete. I asked my friends at the WBBP if there was any way to get at least some books to the underserved students of northern Kenya faster than that. The Project agreed to pack about 50 boxes of books for northern Kenya as long as I paid the shipping costs – not insignificant to such a remote area. Thanks to many generous friends and a successful social-hour fundraiser, the funds have now been raised and the 50 boxes of books are being packed. In a couple of weeks, geography, history, mathematics, reference, and other non-fiction books will be on their way.
-- Sue Gail Spring, Librarian, Norwood School