Sunday, November 16, 2008

The Saudi library in Casablanca

On Saturday, I went to Casablanca to visit the Bibliothèque de la Fondation du Roi Abdul Aziz, the Saudi king. This research library specializes in humanities and social sciences pertaining to Muslim Arab peoples of the Maghreb countries. Hanan had orchestrated the visit since neither of us had visited the library, but both had heard such good things about their work and were interested in seeing their operation firsthand.

The library itself is a work of art, having recently been expanded, and the staff are both serious and motivated. I remarked a willingness to innovate that is not always present in libraries, and the fruits of their work were evident in the number of dedicated users. Hanan and I arrived 20 minutes after the library opened, and we still had to wait ten minutes, nearly missing our appointment, because of the mob of users waiting to gain entrance.

Our guide was invovled in Tech. Services -- not a librarian by training, he had gone to workshops in France and Egypt and was in charge of all things Dewey-related. The library is an OCLC member library (one of only 4 in Morocco); they maintain their own tri-lingual thesaurus of descriptors, apply an adapted (read: expanded) DDC in their cataloging, and are currently using Horizon as the ILS since Horizon is Arab character-friendly and has an office in Egypt.

I have not yet had a chance to tour operations at the national library in Morocco, but from what I've seen and heard, the Saudi library is in many ways carrying out some of the roles typically associated with a national institution. Innovation, access, bibliography, mission, focus, and professionalism are all abundantly evident in their work. I salute the librarians at the Saudi library. They should be very pleased with their work and with the service they are providing.

1 comment:

Emily said...

Thank you, Heather, for your informative blog entry about this truly remarkable institution. Thanks to your blog, I found the correct title for the library, and visited last week. Not only did they have the book I was looking for, it was simple to find, the staff was helpful and friendly, the bathrooms clean, the reading rooms well-equipped and silent...in all it was rather like a dream! For anyone planning to visit, all you need are 2 ID photos, a copy of your carte de sejour or passport, and a copy of une attestation or some sort of proof of your status as a student (if you are a student, that is). The process altogether quite easy, and you can consult the books the first day that you come, since they give you a receipt. I would encourage all researchers, students, curious individuals, etc to check out this beautiful and well-organized library!

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