(A village library- Strictly for illustrative purpose only)
Wikipedia has killed small libraries, they say. You no
longer rush to the nearest library to clear a doubt in history lessons, to read
the latest story by your favorite short story writer or even to spend a few
minutes with like-minded people (the village bookworms). Do you remember the
last time when you visited an old scholar in your village to discuss some issue
that you thought needed erudite clarification or elaboration? Today, Wikipedia
does everything for everyone; knowledge at your fingertips. Say, information at
your fingertips, someone corrects. Do not pass one for the other, they are
different, another one interjects. There are times when you want to know about
what has happened to the good old library in your village. What do you do then?
Either you go there in person to see what the present status of it is or, yes,
here it comes, or you enter the name of that library in Wiki search or Google
search. Alas, most often you don’t get any information about it. Nostalgia
mongers amongst the Non Resident Villagers (NRVs) litter their social
networking site pages with images and information about their villages that
they have left behind long back. But you do not find a picture of the village
library. None seems to be interested.
At Vakkom, a small village where I was born, in Trivandrum
District in Kerala, there is a library called ‘C.Krishna Vilasom Library’.
Before I go into the real story, let me digress a little bit. Vakkom is a beautiful
village and it is rich in money and greenery. It has a very interesting history
that runs back to our independence struggle, Communist Movement and so on. I do
not want to get into that history in this short piece of writing. But, of late
I have found out that this village is more beautiful than the beach paradise,
Goa. Vakkom has backwaters and a few paces away from it a long beach, which is
still used by fishermen. At the northern end, Panayil Kadavu has a small resort
called Kayaloram (Shore of Backwaters) and a huge four star hotel called ‘Vakkom
Palazzo’, both remain underused and under advertised. You cross the backwaters
at Kaikkara by ferry or by road at Panayilkadavu, you reach the famous Varkala
Beach, which is the second important destination of the tourists who visit
South Kerala, after the illustrious Kovalam Beach. There are hardworking as
well as lazy people in this village. Many young people are in the gulf
countries and they have helped making Vakkom an extremely rich village. It is
interesting to see at least twenty per cent of the youngsters who are employed
in the gulf countries, is on leave at any given time and could be seen in the
village riding huge motor bikes or luxury cars. But none goes to C.Krishna
Vilasom Library.
(Vakkom has a houseboat too-in Panayil Kadavu)
My tryst with C.Krishna Vilasom Library was sometime in
1978, when I was nine years old. Many a youth who did not have any other ways
to pass time found their way to this library. It was located near the first
level cross of our village and along the meter gauge rails steam engines passed
four or five times in a day. Watching those huge steam engines pulling the
rickety bogies was an interesting pastime for us. A dilapidated reading room
adjacent to the one room library was open throughout the day and people kept
reading a few newspapers and weeklies sitting at a three and half legged table.
In the evening a jobless young man came to man the issuing counter of the
library which was a dark hole filled with books and only that young man could
pick up the books that we used to ask for. My father was one of the committee
members of the library and it helped me to get a membership in the library
though I was underage. I remember reading almost all the books available in
that library and started testing my skills in writing in due course of time. We
all used to call it ‘Sree Krishna Viasom Library’ though its original name was ‘C.Krishna
Vilasom Library.’
Today I visited the library again after almost three
decades. Now this small library functions from a tiny two storied concrete
building near the government high school at Vakkom where I did my schooling.
This library was shifted to the present location in 1988, after four years I
left the school. Talking to a pious old man, Sisupalan sir, who volunteers to
conduct the day to day affairs of the library, I came to remember that the
small plot of land where the library building is situated now was bought by my
father and he had asked my mother to hand over the property to the library
committee before his untimely demise. Immediately after my father’s death, my
mother promptly handed over the plot to the library. With the help of a
benevolent donor from the village and a few contributions raised from people by
the committee, the library got a permanent building in 1988. By that time I had
left Vakkom for higher studies and had found better and bigger libraries
elsewhere. Somehow, I missed visiting this library till I could do it today.
Sisupalan sir showed me a few books written or translated by me, which made me
really happy. Last year, I had contributed around three hundred books from my
collection to this library though I was not personally present when the books
were handed over to the library committee. Today, I was curious to know the
history of this library and Sisupalan sir was willing to share the history of
it with me.
It all started with a Reformation Campaign conducted by a
Malabar based barrister in 1930 in conjunction with the Temple Entry movement
in 1930. The procession led by this barrister, C.Krishnan, came from Kollam,
then Quilon, via Varkala and crossed the Kaikkara backwaters and culminated at
the Putthan Nada Shiva Temple premises with a huge public meeting. It is said
that when the procession came, the people in Vakkom felled several coconut
trees in order to make a floating bridge across the backwaters for the
procession to cross it without interruption. C.Krishnan made a speech at the
temple grounds and a few youngsters named Malayali Madhavan, Padmanabhan,
Sreedharan and so on got so inspired by the speech of C.Krishnan who had asked
the village youth to wake up and educate people through reading and writing that
they decided to start a library. Padmanabahan was a landlord and had a shop
that sold Ayurvedic medicines. He had a couple of rooms left vacant in the same
property where he and his friends set up the library. Though C.Krishnan was
alive, as a tribute to his name and fame, they decided to call it ‘C.Krishna
Vilasom Library’ which literally means a ‘Library in the Address of C.Krishnan’.
My father was one of the early members who carried the flame of those pioneers
further and he was a member of the governing committee of this library till his
death. Sisupalan Sir also remembers the contributions done by Mr.Sumedan who
has been coming up with material and moral support whenever the library faces
problems of survival.
Though the library was started in 1930, it got its official
recognition in 1936 as its name was included as a member library in the
Grandhasala Soochi (Library Index). The issue registers since 1936 are still
preserved here in this library. As Sisupalan Sir told me about it, I happily
reminded him that in a few of those registers my name and signature also would
be there. Today, C.Krishna Vilasom has a few patrons from in and around the
village. Though it is right in front of the government high school, Sisupalan
sir says that not a single student from the school has enrolled as a member in
the library. So strange, I think. I see one of my students whom I had taught
almost twenty five years back. He is here to pick up some books and that makes
me so happy. He is a government servant now but he finds time to read books of
his interest (organic agriculture). A girl lends her service as an untrained
librarian two hours a day in the evening and rest of the time she works in a
textile shop as a sales girl. She has to find an additional job because the government
gives a grant of Rs.1000/- per month as a salary to the ‘librarian’; that too
comes as a lump sum once in six months. Books are purchased with an annual
purchasing grant provided by the government, which is Rs.20000/- (Twenty
thousand). As anybody else out there, I am also sure that it is absolutely an
inadequate amount for purchasing books. This library has got a computer which
has been lying there unused and now out of order for a long time. Sisupalan sir
tells me that no trained person is there to catalogue the books or keep an
online register. He also tells me that the committee does not have any fund to
employ a full time trained librarian.
This article is an appeal to all my friends who are born and
brought up at Vakkom and now have decent jobs and fat pay packets both in India
and elsewhere. If you really lend a helping hand, C.Krishna Vilasom Library could
gather sufficient capital for employing a full time librarian and also for purchasing
good books. Also a part of the amount could be used for branding it and
spreading the word around. To my surprise, I found out that neither the Member
of Parliament nor the Member of the Legislative Assembly has ever supported
this library despite repeated pleas. Hence, some political pressure also could
be put on the concerned authorities if politically influential people volunteer
to initiate the MPs and MLAs about the plight of this library. And I am sure in
each village in our country, there must be a story similar to this. We cannot
go around and do it for all the libraries in our country. So let us start with
our own Village, Vakkom and its own C.Krishna Vilasom Library.
As an end note; before writing this piece, I went to
Wikipedia to look for some information about this library. I also searched for
images in Google. I came out empty handed.
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