African Poetry Book Fund sends second shipment to African libraries

· 2 min read

African Poetry Book Fund sends second shipment to African libraries

Patrons use the African Poetry library in Uganda.
Courtesy photo
Patrons use the African Poetry library in Uganda.

The African Poetry Book Fund, in partnership with the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries and Prairie Schooner, has sent its second shipment of nearly 1,750 books and journals to its five partner poetry libraries in Africa.

Each of the five reading libraries – in Gambia, Botswana, Ghana, Kenya and Uganda – will receive about 350 books in this donation. This shipment shows the continued strength of the initiative, now in its second year.

The libraries, launched in 2014 in partnership with the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, are staffed mostly by volunteers and provide spaces for reading poetry and cultivating venues for African poets and readers within larger communities.

The African Poetry library in Uganda is housed in the 32° East Ugandan Arts Trust resource center in Kampala, which has hosted a number of recent local events.

“This year, we have engaged the library in a few events,” said library volunteer Beverley Nambozo, a poet, literary activist and founder of the Babishai Niwe (BN) Poetry Foundation and prize. “One of them was a reading held in February, organized by the BN Poetry Foundation. The other was a schools outreach program held in October and organized by the Kampala-based Tontoma Poetry Session. The students from neighboring schools were able to tour and skim the library, picking interests for after-school hours.”

Kadija George, a literary activist, writer and editor of Sable LitMag, said: “The users of the library are simply overwhelmed at the generosity of the African Poetry Book Fund in providing such a gift to the people of the Gambia.” George is the volunteer coordinator at the The Poetry Library in the Gambia, at the National Centre for Arts and Culture’s office in Fajara.

The African Poetry Book Fund is co-sponsored by more than 30 literary presses, organizations and individuals that donated poetry books and journals to the libraries.

The book fund will begin receiving and cataloging donations for its third shipment in spring 2016, to ship in fall 2016. Interested parties may contact Prairie Schooner managing editor Ashley Strosnider at africanpoetrybf@unl.edu for more information.

More information about the African Poetry Library Initiative, as well as a complete list of participating organizations and individuals and the African Poetry Book Fund’s other projects, can be found at http://africanpoetrybf.unl.edu.

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