Off topic but librarians have always been my heroes.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100217432192
'Our mission is crucial': meet the warrior librarians of Ukraine
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/dec/04/our-mission-is-crucial-meet-the-warrior-librarians-of-ukraine
Our mission is crucial: meet the warrior librarians of Ukraine
When Russia invaded Ukraine, a key part of its strategy was to destroy historic libraries in order to eradicate the Ukrainians sense of identity. But Putin hadnt counted on the unbreakable spirit of the countrys librarians
Stephen Marche
Sun 4 Dec 2022 03.00 EST
The morning that Russian bombs started falling on Kyiv, Oksana Bruy woke up worried about her laptop. Bruy is president of the Ukrainian Library Association and, the night before, she hadnt quite finished a presentation on the new plans for the Kyiv Polytechnic Library, so she had left her computer open at work. That morning, the street outside her house filled with the gunfire of Ukrainian militias executing Russian agents. Missile strikes drove her into an underground car park with her daughter, Anna, and her cat, Tom. A few days, later she crept back into the huge empty library, 15,000sqft once filled with the quiet murmurings of readers. As she grabbed her laptop, the air raid siren sounded and she rushed to her car.
Thanks to that computer, Bruy could work. She didnt return to her office; instead, she fled west to Lviv. In all that time, from the first day of the full-scale war, I did not stop working, she says. The librarys IT specialist lived in the neighbourhood. He kept the servers running and the employees connected. So there was not a single days break in the work of the Kyiv Polytechnical Library, all this time, from 24 February. The Russians have not shut her down. Oksana Bruy is winning her battle in the Ukrainian war. The libraries are open.
The battles of the 21st century are hybrid wars fought on any and all fronts: military, economic, political, technological, informational, cultural. Often ignored, or relegated to marginal status, the cultural front is nonetheless foundational. The wars of this century are wars over meaning. As American forces learned in Iraq and Afghanistan, if you lose on the cultural front, military and economic dominance swiftly erode. The terrible battles for Kyiv and Kharkiv, the destruction of Ukraines civilian infrastructure, Europes struggle to heat and feed itself this winter, spiralling inflation, the brutal material horrors of the struggle, might make any cultural reading of the conflict seem fantastical or glib. But at its core, and from its origin, this Ukrainian conflict has been a war over language and identity. And Ukraines libraries are the key.
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