This story is from September 9, 2020

Mizoram sows seeds of street reading in Arunachal Pradesh

With libraries situated far away, most children in Arunachal Pradesh fail to develop reading habits in their growing up years, affecting their overall learning. To reverse this trend, a 30-year-old woman of Arunachal’s Nirjuli in Papum Pare district has set up a street-corner library on August 30 solely by her own efforts. As per 2011 Census, Arunachal's literacy rate is 65.4%.
Mizoram sows seeds of street reading in Arunachal Pradesh
The self-help library in Papum Pare district’s Nirjuli area
In a remote state like Arunachal Pradesh, access to booze is much easier than laying your hands on books as you can spot a wine shop every 100 metres. With libraries situated far away, most children in the state fail to develop reading habits in their growing up years, affecting their overall learning.
To reverse this trend, a 30-year-old woman of Arunachal’s Nirjuli in Papum Pare district has set up a street-corner library on August 30 solely by her own efforts.
The move is expected to inspire others to take up similar initiatives in other parts of the state. According to the 2011 Census, Arunachal has a literacy rate of 65.4%.
“I bought books of all kinds worth Rs 10,000 and spent another Rs 10,000 to make the wooden ‘Self-Help Library’. I have kept 70-80 books there and the rest are in my room,” said Ngurang Meena, who has been encouraging the locality’s children to spend 15-20 minutes at the library every day. “I have been asking the kids to visit the library by offering them chocolates,” Meena laughed.
The idea to start this initiative dawned upon Meena when she came across a Facebook picture of a Mizo youth on a bike, reaching out towards a tiny box with shelves full of books. The quaint postbox-like structure was nothing but a library; one of the several ‘little free libraries’ (LFLs) that have sprung up in Aizawl. The photograph captivated Meena, sitting 800km away, and she set about creating her own LFL at Nirjuli, a town of 10,000-15,000 people.
“Although my inspiration is Mizoram, I realise that Arunachal is very different. Kids have poor writing skills. I want students of Classes IX-XII to improve themselves by reading more,” Meena said, adding that the nearest government library is in Naharlagun, 10km away.
The library has received books from two donors so far. “I gave a dictionary and two books on UGC NET. I felt an urge to see the library for myself when I heard of it,” said Tamchi Gablo, 27, of Itanagar. “I couriered some books by Dale Carnegie,” added Prasanna Kumar
Konch, a librarian in Arunachal’s Lohit district, a hub of the small library movement.
Nirjuli library does not lend books yet

Meena’s library does not have a protective glass front yet, nor a lock. “I know that books might be stolen. I am not unduly worried about this as I stay right opposite the library,” said the woman, who runs an NGO. To protect the books from rain damage, she has hung some plastic sheets in front of the stall.
Unlike the LFLs in Aizawl, the Nirjuli library does not lend books yet. But Meena added that she would have to start lending to help schoolboys get over their ‘embarrassment’ at reading in public. “I see them looking at the library but doing not much else. They would be more comfortable borrowing books home than reading with little children,” she added.
Aizawl’s Lallaisangzuali Sailo, a librarian who started Mizoram’s first two LFLs with the help of a colleague, has a word of advice for Meena. “Often we see that the books we deposit in our LFLs are gone. Please don’t get discouraged. Even if people take away books, at least they are reading,” said Lallaisangzuali, who set up two LFLS in Aizawl’s New Market and MZU Park in 2017.
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