Dear all,As I have always told TF, it is sad that we praise and recount the good deeds of our heros and heroines only at their interment. I am not faulting the Yorubas for the saying "Ijo Abaku la di ere" - "We celebrate people only when they are dead", I am however of the opinion that recounting the good deeds of people when they are alive is important for life-lessons and also to demonstrate to them that their good deeds are recognized.To this end, two other people that should be on the list of generous donors to Nigerian university libraries are Professors Akinjide Osuntokun and Toyin Falola.As the pioneer Chair of History, Redeemer's University, I can recall and testify to Professor Osuntokun's generous donation to the University Library, the Tekena Tamuno Library during the 2005/2006 academic year. Permit me to bore you with the story.We were preparing for NUC's Resource Verification Exercise and, after auditing the university's holding on History and International Relations, which was scanty and not up-to-date. I broached other members of the Department on the issue, noting the implications on our chances of scaling through the Resource Verification and later, Programmatic Accreditation Exercise. We decided to discuss it with the Dean, Professor Osuntokun.In his characteristic quiet and suave manner, he simply asked Ms. Dairo Oyeleye and myself to report to his house that evening. When we got there, Oyeleye, Miss Bukola Ajayi (Prof's Research Assistant during the time), Prof's personal driver and myself spent that evening and the following weekend loading his books - thousands of books he bought with his personal money from the beginning of his career till then - into two cars and taking them to the university. That was how Professor Osuntokun yielded his personal books to the university library.Oyeleye and myself initially thought it was in the bid to secure NUC's approval, but even after both the Resource Verification and Programmatic Accreditation Exercise, the books were left at the library for use by our students.In 2016, I was at the Redeemer's University and visited the library, not only were the books there, I also found others - all bearing his imprint - in the library and with the university library stamp.I first came to know Professor Toyin Falola when I was a Research Assistant to Professor JF Ade-Ajayi in 2001. Few weeks into my resumption of work, a package arrived from the United States for JFA. It contained an assortment of books. After painstakingly looking at each of the copies, the Librarian and I were tasked with classifying and cataloguing them into our computer before stocking them on the shelves. Professor Falola sent the books to JFA.Few years later, I met with Professor Falola in person during the UTexas History Department's Annual African History Conference. At the end of the conference, all participants were given books - what I later came to know as his tradition. I have witnessed instances like this on many occasions since then. Besides giving individuals books, I have witnessed him donating volumes of books to universities. I was at the Federal University, Lokoja (FUL) when he was donating 'a mountain' of books to the FUL library.Gestures like these are rare and served as a lesson for me, at least.I have cited their cases at different times and at different places, including at the Nordiska AfrikaInstitutet, Uppsala (2006/7) and the African Studies Center, Leiden University in 2009/10. In both cases, the institutions emulated them by donating books - all of which I forwarded to the libraries of both the Redeemer's University and Joseph Ayo Babalola University.In the same class as these two institutions is the Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture. When I recounted the efforts of Professors Osuntokun and Falola at the Centenary Celebration of the Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade in 2008/9 academic year, the Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture took a cue from them by granting the Redeemer's University access to JSTOR for one year. The access was at no cost to the university. If my recollection is correct, NUC took a cue from this and signed a contract with JSTOR which then made it available to all Nigerian universities - one whole year after we did it at RUN.I shared the above not to launder the images of Professors Osuntokun and Falola or to curry favors from them, but to attest to the fact that there are many silent and largely unknown efforts in this regard.When the history of Nigeria's educational development is written, people like these two should not only be remembered for their academic contributions, but also their kindness. Books, no matter how well-written will disappear into the gutters of forgetfulness, no one should forget these acts of kindness that will live in the minds of recipients forever. I am sure Professor Osuntokun would have forgotten how the above went down, but could I ever forget? What about over hundreds of thousand students that have read and will still read those books?Thank you very much to all the mentioned individuals in other posts and these two. Even if others would wait to recount your good deeds only at your interment, I am stating this loudly and clearly that you are worthy examples in kindness.***************************************************************************************************
Bukola A. Oyeniyi
*****************************************************************************************************
Missouri State University
College of Humanities and Public Affairs
History Department
Room 440, Strong Hall,
901 S. National Avenue
Springfield, MO 65897
Email: oyeniyib@gmail.com
***********************************************************
--On Thu, Apr 13, 2023 at 4:54 PM Oluwatoyin Adepoju <ovdepoju@gmail.com> wrote:Fantastic.
I've been thinking about the future of my own library in Lagos.
I once used it as a public access library in the ground floor flat of my house in Benin, employed in it a library attendant and a computer operator when computers were still new in Nigeria but my current space is more private and security is now a more serious issue in Nigeria.
I later tried to replicate something similar through building what I understood as a research centre in Histon, near Cambridge UK, an expensive enterprise since I was renting the space.
I also aspired to set up something similar in the Ogba sacred forest in Benin only to return to Nigeria to find the forest has given way to intense urbanization.
Truth is, I wonder how much reading I do these days, and what percentage of that is from print texts. I hope to enter again into intensive reading and the print books would be priceless, being intimate companions whose presence around me is like living in a wonderful palace vibrating with achievement and aspiration from fellow travellers across time and space.
I have Falola, Wariboko and Kenneth Harrow sections in my library, specifically Harrow's work on Islam, the latter very inspiring, and his book on change in African literature, among other writers and fields of study.
Thanks
toyin--On Thu, 13 Apr 2023 at 15:51, Harrow, Kenneth <harrow@msu.edu> wrote:--I might be interested in such a project. I am retired and have to consider where many of my books are to go. I want a reliable, secure library or its equivalent where it would be needed and do the most good.Ken
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From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Cornelius Hamelberg <corneliushamelberg@gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 13, 2023 8:07:09 AM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: Library Philanthropy in Africa
--On Thu, 13 Apr 2023, 13:34 Cornelius Hamelberg, <corneliushamelberg@gmail.com> wrote:
Augustine Togonu-Bickersteth,
Such a big word: Philanthropy
Here's a definition of Philanthropist according to the Devil's Dictionary
As it has been written, "Your elders shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions"
Here's something, a kind of vision of how it could be in Nigeria, a vision that should move you deeply as it did me.
I might be going off on a limb here, but I think that we ( august members of this series) can all contribute our widow's mite to the essentially non-reading generation that's nonetheless hungry, and thirsting for knowledge!
How many hundreds of books have we not bought, read, thrown away, or discarded? Collectively, enough to fill a few libraries. Yet, how many of us have read all of Ojogbon Falola's works, and the vast output of so many other essential books, in the departments of poetry, philosophy, facts, and fiction? Apart from the limited time at our disposal, and a lack of inclination, another reason could be that we are not all billionaires like Elder Obi the leader of the Nigerian Labour Party, and this means that some of the book prices / our heart's desires and all that music that's not available at "affordable prices" are simply out of reach for us the common folk, the lumpenproletariat. But all these essential works could be made freely available in libraries scattered throughout Nigeria, like mosques, churches, schools, petrol stations, restaurants, drinking parlours, banks…
N.B., I say " Elder Obi" considering that the retirement age in France is 62, which means that if he was a Frenchman, he should be looking forward to retiring as a youth leader by the 19th of July this year…
Always a valuable resource: https://www.britannica.com/
--On Thursday, 13 April 2023 at 10:53:43 UTC+2 Augustine Togonu-Bickersteth wrote:
The Top Library Philanthropists in inAfrica;, Emeka Offor, Tony Elumelu,, Buratai et al
Chief Emeka Offor the andrew carnegie of Africa, donated a staggering 30 milion dollars worth of books to higjher education in nigeria. chief Afe babalola the father of Africa ,recently donated 10 milion pounds to Kings college London for the Afe Babalola transformation centre. is is believe a bulk of the sum would be going to library development.
then we have Tony elumelu, chairman of UBA, united bank for Africa, you have the UBA foundation, donating books, Lt General Tukur Buratai ex chief of army staff donated 1000 books to his primary school and then set up a Think Tank which is believed to have an extensive library
from wikipedia we learn john Wood co-founded Room to Read in 2001 with Dinesh Shrestha and Erin Ganju. Operating in 20 low-income countries, the organization focuses on increasing literacy and gender equality in education. Its programs develop literacy skills and a habit of reading among primary school children, and support girls to complete secondary school with the relevant life skills to succeed in school and beyond. Over 25 million children have benefitted from the organization's programs.[1 #london #development #education #transformation #bank #africa #nigeria #school
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