Posters
are splashed across walls and billboards in Conakry as the city kicks off a
year as the World Book Capital
|
As Conakry's year as
World Book Capital gets under way, book lovers in Guinea are seizing a rare
opportunity to instill a lifelong appreciation for the written word in a nation
where most people are illiterate.
The
ramshackle West African capital ushered in a year of all things literary on
Sunday with acrobatics, slam poets and books in every corner, beginning a year
of events as United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)'s designated capital for the promotion of reading.
Images
of authors' faces and dust jackets are newly splashed across walls and
billboards in this city of two and a half million people, while books multiply
by the minute on stands and in neat arrangements on the floor for pedestrians
to browse.
The
World Book Capital concept is now in its 17th year after beginning life in
Madrid in 2001 with the aim of promoting a year-long programme of events to
make bibliophiles out of the most reticent readers.
Speaking
at the opening event in the city centre, President Alpha Condé described the
UNESCO designation as "more than an honour", calling it a unique
chance for Guinea to "initiate its cultural renaissance and return to its
former place in the cultural arena of Africa".
Condé
described Guinea's literary figures as bulwarks against an Africa "at risk
of losing its cultural identity".
However,
the country's literary path is laden with obstacles.
According
to the most recent UN data just 25 percent of Guineans are literate, and of
those who completed school just 35-40 percent read regularly, according to the
education ministry.
"We
are making a big push because Guineans don't like to read at all," said
Mamadou Bailo Diallo, president of Guinea's street booksellers association.
"We
are trying to persuade Guinea to buy books," Diallo added. "But what
is really important is not to buy, but to read."
Many
of the booksellers offer second-hand stock in so-called "bookshops on the
floor", selling them directly from the pavement.
As
the city prepared for its year of the word, this traditional method was mixed
in with more conventional bookstands set up for the ceremony, where children's
books nestled next to encyclopaedias.
- Underfunding -
For
a country struggling with high rates of poverty, buying books can slip as a
priority when it is sometimes difficult to meet basic needs, a gap the World
Book Capital concept hopes to address.
Sansy
Kaba Diakite, the director of the project in Guinea, said a digital lending
initiative will offer an alternative to underfunded and neglected African
libraries, and promised that Conakry's citizens would not be the only ones to
benefit.
"Exercise books, books in schools, in universities and bookshops" were being distributed in four provincial locations, he said, with the particular aim of celebrating Guinean authors including Camara Laye, a pioneer of francophone African literature, and novelist Tierno Monenembo.
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