An exhibition celebrating al-Ghazali in McLennan Library Building

Abu Hamid al- Ghazali was born in Tus in modern day Iran. al-Ghazali is one of the most significant and prominent (Islamic) thinkers and authors. He was a prolific writer particularly on four main subjects: philosophy, theology, law, and Sufism. His influence resonates even to this day and amongst some of the great Western philosophers of yesterday. The exhibition celebrates the life of al-Ghazali on this, the 900th year since his passing in 1111 A.D. and highlights some of the unique holdings of the Islamic Studies Library as well as McGill’s Rare Books and Special Collections.

The exhibition, housed in McLennan Library Building, is accessible every day within opening hours. Free entrance

Wellcome Arabic Manuscripts Online

The Arabic manuscripts collection of the Wellcome Library (London) comprises around 1000 manuscript books and fragments relating to the history of medicine. For the first time a website enables a substantial proportion of this collection to be consulted online via high-quality digital images of entire manuscripts and associated rich metadata.

These manuscripts are part of the Wellcome Library’s Asian Collection, which comprises some 12,000 manuscripts and 4,000 printed books in 43 different languages. The Islamic holdings include Arabic and Persian manuscripts and printed books, and a small collection of Ottoman manuscripts and Turkish books. The core of these collections relates to the great heritage of classical medicine, preserved, enlarged and commentated on throughout the Islamic world, stretching from Southern Spain to South and South-east Asia.

 

Melcom

Recently the Middle East Libraries Committee held its annual conference in Berlin, Germany. Dr Jamil Ragep of the Institute of Islamic Studies presented on the ISMI project. ISMI is a joint project between the Institute and the Max Planck Society to digitize numerous manuscripts with a focus on Islamic sciences in the broader definition. Moreover, Jennifer Garland of Blackader Lauterman Library and Sean Swanick of the Islamic Studies Library presented on some of the lacquer bookbinding holdings located in Rare Books and Special Collections. Their presentation focused on the transmission of knowledge in cultural exchanges taking place between Europe and Qajar Iran.

The conference itself was attended by close to 100 librarians from all over the world. Many presentations discussed new and upcoming projects, such as the Amir blog by Peter Magierski of NYU that is focused on collecting Open Access materials. For full details including the conference program go to the Melcom site.

Bookstores Struggle as Kosovars Shun Reading

02 Jun 2011 / 14:55

The removal of VAT on books last year has failed to reignite interest in Kosovo in the written word

Besiana Xharra

While cafés in Pristina are full of young people, the capital’s libraries and bookstores are almost always empty. No official statistics exist on how much people read in Kosovo, but most agree that reading is on the decline. Booksellers complain that they are not selling books while librarians say their only visitors are students seeking course material.

Some blame poor economic conditions, the rise of the Internet, government policies, or the destruction of libraries and bookstores during the independence war of the late 1990s.

But a law adopted last July, exempting book sales from value added tax, VAT, hasn’t made a difference, booksellers say.

“There’s been no difference in sales compared to last year, when books were a little more expensive because of tax,” Nuhredin Bashota, owner of the Albini bookstore in Pristina, says. “The level of interest among people in buying books is extremely small.”

Weak sales at May’s International Book Fair in Pristina served to confirm fears of a declining interest in books. Behxhet Bici, president of the Union of Publishers in Kosovo, which organized the fair, blames the Internet.

“Today almost everything can be found on the net, and as a result of the economic crisis, readers choose the net and don’t buy books,” Bici says.

“Books in Kosovo have many problems that no one is trying to solve,” Nazim Rrahmani, a prominent Kosovo writer, says.

Kosovo’s appetite for literature hasn’t recovered from the destruction of libraries and bookstores carried out by Serbian forces during the war, Rrahmani feels, while Kosovo’s own institutions hadn’t done anything to revive interest in books, either.

 
Kosovo National Library demolished parts

Ramadan Beshiri, of the promotions department in the culture ministry, disagrees. The ministry has promoted books through various publications and helped libraries buy books – all to no avail, he says.

Too few books?

Sali Bashota, director of the National Library of Kosovo, says part of the trouble is that too few books are published in Kosovo these days. Thousands were once published each year, but that number has dwindled to just several hundred.

Bashota says poor distribution means that the books in print don’t reach all their potential readers. “Not enough is being done to provide readers with books,” Bashota says.

Abdullah Zeneli, who owns the Buzuki publishing house in Pristina, sees the problem differently. He laments the unavailability of new books. “Libraries don’t have the new books that readers require, and the readers cannot get them in bookstores, either, so the problem is in the supply,” Zeneli says.

To that, Bashota responds that library budgets don’t stretch to new titles. Many people who frequent libraries and bookstores are students – with correspondingly thin wallets. When they come to the Fjola bookstore, for example, they aren’t usually there to shop for high-end literature.

“We have many requests – but they are for photocopies or for educational literature,” Edona Peci says. “We also sell books, but not many.”

A hard sell in the rain:

Librarians and booksellers aren’t the only ones worried by the downturn. In the shadow of Pristina’s most recognizable landmark, the Grand Hotel, vendors peddle books from outdoor tables. They, too, are suffering from what they feel is official disinterest in their trade, which is highly dependent on the weather.

The city government promised to build them a specialized facility fours year ago. It has yet to materialize. “I do not understand this. We do not need to stand here in the rain and snow,” bookseller Hajredin Bajra said.

Muhamet Gashi, a spokesperson for the municipality of Pristina, had no explanation for the delay but said the city hadn’t forgotten the vendors’ plight. “I understand them, and we will soon resolve the problem,” Gashi said.

Kosovo’s six bestselling books in 2010-2011

Dispute and Accident, by Ismail Kadare  Who manipulates Europe? by Ulick Varange  Men who Hate Women, by Stieg Larsson  The Secret, by Rhonda Byrne and  The backstage crisis that ravaged the state, year 97, by Mero Baze.
Wartime destruction   According to the National Library of Kosovo, Serbian forces destroyed 65 public libraries housing 968,233 copies in the war of the late 1990s. They also burned 14 special libraries with 145,105 copies, 86 school libraries housing 325,415 copies and 10 high school libraries with 226,743 copies. Serbian military and paramilitary forces burned a total of 175 libraries containing 1,665,496 copies.

Minassian Collection of Qur’anic Manuscripts now accessible online

The Center for Digital Scholarship is pleased to announce that the Minassian Collection of Qur’anic Manuscripts is now accessible online. It features 200 Qur’anic manuscript folios dating from the 9th to the 16th centuries. The flowering of Arabic calligraphy has its origins in the efforts of Muslim societies to preserve and disseminate the scriptural verses of the Qur’an.
Enjoy!