Reading culture is slowly disappearing in Kashmir
Kashmiris decide not to read … and receding reading culture pushes libraries out of work
Zehra Shafi (Kashmir Images)
Srinagar: The sad reality about gradual decrease in book-reading habits in the Valley may not evoke the kind of reaction it deserves from the masses but the trend, as many fear, may lead to ‘No Books’ soon.
Reading has always been a passion for some people — be it children, youngsters or elderly. But this passion is eventually decreasing day by day in the Kashmir Valley where people seem too busy with their routine jobs that they hardly get time to read books.
Officials from the City Central Library confirm that there has been a steady decline in the reading culture.
To drive this point home, they site that in the year 2007, the total number of borrowers was 15,200 which slowly came down to 10,000 in 2008.
Talking to ‘Kashmir Images’, Deputy Director Libraries, Bashir Ahmad Khan said that the City Central library alone has a rich collection of different genres but still the response is not so good.
“At present, there are about 28,481 books available in the library including academic books, fiction, non-fiction, etc., but still people visit the library occasionally,” he regretted.
When asked about the reason, Khan said that since the inception of Internet, people have got so attracted to it that they hardly step into the libraries. He agrees that Internet being the fast information medium has proved very tempting.
“The mushrooming of Internet has affected the readership to a great extent. But there are still some people who enjoy reading books,” Khan immediately adds a rider.
He says people have their own tastes and they have love for certain books. “Despite the technology boom, the habit of this section of readership has remained more or less unaffected,” Khan adds.
Other officials including the library staff at CCL say that students who are already overburdened with academic books “don’t get extra time to read books stuffed in public libraries.”
A miniscule chunk of students, however, come in winters to borrow or read books in the libraries reading room, they said.
Booksellers also agree that there is decline in the reading culture. The owner of Gulshan Books, says, “Nowadays e-mailing and social networking is on high. People spend hours on internet browsing and chatting, and obviously this time is a drain on the chunk which otherwise would have gone into book reading.”
He said sometimes young people come to his shop asking for the books by some celebrated authors.
Zaffar Ahmad, another bookseller also agrees that the reading culture is “definitely decreasing”.
“Frequent strikes and shutdowns have also affected the readers as well as the sales of books. The sales of competition-oriented books, for instance, are worst affected due to strikes; students are not able to buy them in time (when they need them) and thus they remain untouched on our shelves.”