Opinion
Need For Functional Libraries In LGAs
Education is now increasingly becoming a race between history and catastrophie. Yet its dream and pursuit has remained the most needed impetus to drive our civilization.
The urge and passion that propelled people to seek knowledge genuinely through extensive reading and research development is today whittled down by a dangerous penchant on the part of the youth to cut coners to achieve personal gains. No thanks to the high premium on paper qualification which used to be seen as meal ticket to access juicy opportunities. Today, it appears that violence has been institutionalised as a potent bargain weapon for the youths to get deserving attention, at the expense of the search for genuine knowledge.
Our youths today no longer find pleasure and satisfaction in engaging in intellectual and academic activities as symbolized by regular visits and use of public libraries, where ideas are shared among budding intellectuals. The experience of the times has stifled the interest in the pursuit of knowledge, resulting in the abuse of intellectual powers. A most ominous sign, is that most young people today assess themselves through an exotic and flamboyant lifestyle completely devoid of the nexus of knowledge and its application which is the guiding philosophy of life. They end up consumed by their ignorance, having failed to fill their emptiness through functional education.
A critical component of educational development in our society is the use of libraries. Libraries provide the veritable platform for the exercise of the mind which is our fundamental resource base. Libraries as custodians of intellectual properties and historical artifacts are essential to our individual and institutional development. In Rivers State, public libraries managed under the Rivers State Library Board has its central offices at Benard Carr Street, Port Harcourt, and Afam Street in D/line also in Port Harcourt.
A visit to the central library in Port Harcourt will expose the depth of degradation of the library which was a divisional library under the defunct Eastern Nigeria Government .
The Jubilee Library at Afam Street was an interventionist scheme, by the Nigerian Agip Oil Company, NNPC Joint Venture, to mark the 25
th anniversary of the creation of Rivers State.
Today the two libraries need expansion and repair of basic infrastructures which are over-stretched because of the teeming number of users.
Most of the library users sit on the field under trees to read because of lack of space. The expected services of the library are lacking, as the buildings are hollow and bereft of its cherished possessions, quality books, artifacts aesthetics etc. Because of population explosion in the township, most people can no longer have good acces to the public libraries. But it is also interesting to note that the bulk of our population live in the rural areas. Apart from functionally equipping the public libraries in Port Harcourt, there is also need to establish functional libraries in the rural areas.
The establishment of libraries in the local government areas as affiliate to the central library at Bernard Carr, could be adopted as pet projects by local government chairmen, as a way of enabling the rural populace to have access to conducive learning environment. It is perhaps a more rewarding measure of empowerment than to dole out money to a selected bunch of loyalists in the name of empowerment.
In carrying out such projects, the management of the Rivers State Library Board should be involved to effect the desired training in manpower and professional service delivery.
The LGAs that have existing public libraries should upgrade them and encourage people through awareness creation to use them.
A public affairs analyst who commented on the situation recently, frowned at the disengagement of youths from the process of learning.
According to him. “It is most disheartening to note that our youth today no longer have confidence in education as a means of attaining success. It is a sign of compromise of the future, it gives a clear picture of what the future portends and I feel for this country”. However Rivers State has a chance to obviate this inglorious path. With the level of commitment of the Government to the development of the education sector, there is hope of consolidation of the future of the state.
But an indepth commitment to the development of public libraries will no doubt serve as an elixir to conducive learning and sustained reading culture. Thus the State Library Board should be made to be an integral part of the now revitalised annual book carnival. The festival of books intended to sustain reading culture in the state should also be domesticated in the LGAs, through functional use of libraries. This initiative will also help in eroding boredom, the chronic disease of the age to which most of our youths has fallen victims.