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Your excellencies, distinguished colleagues, friends,
Thank you for coming to this conference, especially those of you who have traveled
long distances to get here. Ambassador Oliver, thank you for that introduction,
and for hosting this event in this historic place. And thank you, Assistant
Director General Khan, for your support. We are grateful to UNESCO, the
U.S. Mission to UNESCO, and the U.S. National Commission for UNESCO for
working with us in organizing this event.
Our purpose, this evening and tomorrow, is to discuss plans to build
a World Digital Library, working with UNESCO, its member states, and
cultural institutions from around the world. I look forward to exchanging
views with all of you on what this initiative should accomplish, and
how it best can be carried out.
In this opening session, I am going to outline for you my own vision
for a World Digital Library, not with the expectation that the Library
of Congress or I myself have answers to all the questions that a project
of this complexity raises, but as a way of kicking off the discussion
and inspiring you to think about the same questions as well as raise
new ones that you might have.
The basic vision is straightforward. As I said my speech last year
to the U.S. National Commission in which I first proposed this idea,
the goal is to create an online encyclopedia, freely available over
the Internet, of important and interesting cultural objects from the
world’s countries and civilizations. These works will reside in
a large, online repository that can be searched and used in different
ways by teachers, librarians, scholars, and the general public.
In addition to the repository, the World Digital Library should have
special sections, developed by scholars and curators, that present the “memory” of
countries and civilizations by selecting the most important of these
cultural objects, placing them in their historical context for a general
audience.
In putting forward this vision for a World Digital Library, I had
in mind the experience of the Library of Congress in developing bilateral,
bilingual digital library projects, beginning with Russia in 1999 and
continuing with partners in Brazil, Egypt, France, Germany, the Netherlands,
and Spain. I am grateful to our partner institutions in these countries,
all of which are represented at this conference, for the work that we
have accomplished together. I look forward to working with them – as
well as with many other new partners – in determining how we can
take the experience and knowledge gained in building a series of bilateral,
bilingual projects into a genuine multilateral, multilingual effort
to display important cultural materials in all languages and from all
countries, especially emphasizing cultural diversity and bringing developing
countries to the forefront.
The proposed World Digital Library is not intended to replace or compete
with the many planned or existing national and regional digital library
projects. Such projects are important for helping countries and regions
to establish or strengthen their identities, for building regional cooperation,
and for meeting the needs of teachers and scholars from those regions
and countries.
I envision that the World Digital Library, whatever
form it ultimately takes, will work with these projects,
support them to the degree that it is able, and exploit
as many synergies and complementarities with them as
possible.
At the same time, however, I do not believe that a World Digital Library
can be the mere mechanical aggregation of the various national and regional
parts. As a historian, I know that “world history” is not
just the sum of our separate national and regional histories. Rather,
it is a sub-discipline in its own right, focused on offering comparative,
cross-national, and cross-cultural perspectives – at its best
helping people ask the big questions about what civilizations share
in common and what makes them distinctive. In much the same way, a World
Digital Library has to offer intellectual and cultural value going beyond
that provided by the individual national and regional projects.
The World Digital Library – both the digital library itself
and the cooperation among scholars, librarians, and curators from around
the world that will be needed to create this digital library – has
the potential to accomplish many worthwhile objectives.
I will cite three in particular.
First, a World Digital Library will promote inter-cultural dialogue
and international understanding. Because the Internet is by definition
international and because the primary documents of culture have a special
human appeal that transcends politics, a well-organized and appropriately
presented collection of such documents offers an enormous potential
for increasing trans-cultural understanding, especially through the
impact it can have on curious and multi-medially oriented young people.
A second and related objective of the World Digital Library will be
to increase the volume of freely available, high-quality content on
the Internet, particularly in languages other than English. In this
way, the World Digital Library will help to increase linguistic and
cultural diversity and contribute to UNESCO’s goal of building
knowledge societies.
The Library of Congress already has a track record in this area. In
our bilateral projects, we have worked with partners to increase their
capacity to scan materials in Russian, Portuguese, Arabic, and other
languages. Much more needs to be done, however, both in terms of extending
digitization and content-creation to other countries and languages,
and in improving multilingual searching and display capabilities so
that our sites are equally accessible to audiences using many different
languages.
A third objective that the World Digital Library will promote is capacity
building in developing countries. The Library of Congress is not a development
assistance agency, so let me be clear: I am not proposing that we get
into the development assistance business for its own sake. We have no
mandate from our own Congress to do this. What I am saying, however,
is that creating a World Digital Library of cultural heritage content
will be such a highly ambitious task that it will require the skills
and knowledge of people around the world. We in the developed world
library and cultural community will have to assist in building capacity
in the developing countries, not as an act of charity, but because without
such capacity we will not be able to accomplish a venture of this magnitude
and complexity. We will cut ourselves off from digital access to the
cultures and civilizations representing the majority of the world’s
peoples in a way that not only will make us spiritually and intellectually
poorer, but that in this age of globalization will undermine our ability
to deal with the economic, political, and security challenges of the
future. I will return to this point in a moment.
In the eighteen months since I first proposed the idea of a World Digital Library,
reaction from around the world has been enthusiastic. Current and prospective
partners have expressed interest in working on this project. Some of our partners – from
Brazil, Egypt, and Russia – are already participating in the planning
process and the development of the prototype site that we will preview tomorrow.
We also have developed a close relationship with IFLA, whose incoming president,
Claudia Lux, will serve as our conference chair tomorrow. I much appreciate
these expressions of interest and support.
At the same time, however, many people around the world have questions
about the World Digital Library that need to be answered as we go forward.
One of the questions that we hear most often concerns financing. Who
is going to pay for all this? And, assuming that most of the funding
will have to come from the private sector, what will this mean for the
independence and quality of the project? Will the World Digital Library
be commercialized or privatized? These questions were raised with particular
urgency last November, when Sergei Brin, the co-founder of Google, Inc.,
and I jointly announced that Google was making the first gift to the
proposed World Digital Library.
Like other national libraries, the Library of Congress is a government-supported
institution. The Congress of the United States generously provides for
our staff salaries, our buildings and other facilities, and our basic
acquisitions of books, periodicals, and other materials. However, for
special initiatives involving outreach and education, we rely on gifts
from private individuals, foundations, and companies.
This has been the case with exhibits, fellowships, and publications,
and it has become the norm for our digital library projects as well.
American Memory, our flagship digital library project that began in
1994, was a $60 million effort to put online five million items from
American history over a five year period. Congress provided 25 percent
of the funding, or $15 million, but the other $45+ million came from
private donors.
It is in this connection that we sought and received the gift from
Google for the World Digital Library. The Google funding is a gift,
and does not come with strings attached. We have been given the money
to develop a plan and to demonstrate a prototype of the World Digital
Library, both of which are to be made freely available to the public.
It also is important to note that the World Digital Library will deal
with rare and unique cultural objects. It has nothing to do with the
mass book digitization projects that are being undertaken by various
private companies and non-profit consortia, and it will not, because
of its overwhelming focus on older materials, get involved in controversies
over copyright and intellectual property.
As the project proceeds, we fully expect to receive additional gifts
and grants from companies, foundations, and individuals who support
the building of a World Digital Library. We hope that contributors in
many countries will back this effort, either by contributing to the
World Digital Library fund that the Library of Congress has established
or, just as well, by giving directly to partner institutions in other
countries who then can use this funding to participate in the World
Digital Library. We fully expect to fund equipment and other costs in
developing countries in order to enable them to take part in this effort.
Other questions that we frequently hear with regard to the World Digital
Library concern issues of content selection, multilingualism, editorial
interpretation, and management control. What will be the role of the
Library of Congress in establishing the World Digital Library? Will
the World Digital Library further increase the presence of English-language
material on the Internet, or will it strengthen the position of other
languages in cyberspace? Will it promote American or what are sometimes
called “Anglo-Saxon” values, or will it be open to genuine
diversity – cultural and linguistic?
We will be addressing many of these issues in detail in our sessions
tomorrow.
In this setting, I would like to make just two general points in response
to these questions. The first concerns the scope and ambition of the
project. The second concerns the need for cooperation in carrying out
such a project and ensuring that it is a gift of free and open knowledge
to the world.
To be worthy of its name, the World Digital Library has to be an ambitious
undertaking. If this project is not done on a large scale and at the
highest level of quality – both technical and with regard to scholarship
and curatorial expertise – it will not be worth doing. Without
such scale and excellence, the world will be better off if we all just
concentrate on our national and regional projects and let the commercial
search engines find the material – something which we all know
they are very good at. So we must aim high.
As the specialists who will attend tomorrow’s meeting will see
and discuss in detail, we envision a project that will include three
elements:
First, a network of scanning centers around the world,
concentrated in developing countries, that will produce
the content needed for the World Digital Library.
Second, a powerful, multilingual website through which
the public can access the vast repository of digital
content that will be created by these scan centers.
Third, a state-of-the-art network that enables content
to be distributed around the world in a way that is
fast and reliable and that can be preserved over time.
A network of scanning centers, located mainly in cultural institutions
in developing countries, is needed to carry out the digitization of
important cultural artifacts in these countries, thereby making sure
that all cultures and languages are represented in the World Digital
Library.
The Library of Congress already has worked with our fellow national
libraries in Brazil and Egypt in setting up these kinds of centers,
building on our experience going back to the late 1990s in working with
the Russian State Library and the National Library of Russia. The content
produced by these scanning centers, supplemented by content contributed
from existing projects, will begin to fill up the World Digital Library
repository.
The material to be digitized should include not only paper and printed
works, but video and audio material that document cultural traditions
that are in danger of being lost to humanity. I think in particular
of the music in many languages and from many cultures that needs to
be captured and preserved before it is gone.
Our second challenge is to build a powerful World Digital Library
website that allows for maximal exploitation of this content. The site
has to be multilingual, not just with regard to its content, but its
functionality as well. A reasonable starting objective is full search
and display capability in seven languages, with others to be added later.
The website must provide interesting and innovative pathways into
the repository of material so that students, educators, and all users
are encouraged to explore, will be inspired, and will come back again
and again for education and enjoyment. It must employ maps, time-lines,
and other features that facilitate asking the questions that are appropriate
to an initiative that is global in scope: At a given place, what cultures
and civilizations rose and fell over the centuries and millennia, and
what traces of them remain? At a given time, what was happening in Europe,
China, Egypt, or other parts of the world?
The World Digital Library also needs to have interactive features – blogs,
special presentations, chats with curators – that will encourage
people to be participants in rather than just passive users of the World
Digital Library.
Our third challenge is to build a robust network, based on a system
of mirror sites, that enables all regions of the world to provide access
to all of the content in the World Digital Library and that supports
the goals of preservation, high performance, and constant availability.
Following from this first general point about thinking big and setting
ambitious goals, my second point concerns how to achieve these goals.
The Library of Congress, with the support of UNESCO, is convening this
experts meeting to begin a discussion on how to carry out something
on this scale and complexity. The Library of Congress hopes to continue
to be a facilitator in this process. Our purpose is not to control,
but to bring all of the interested parties together to undertake this
effort. No one institution can do any of this work alone. It will take
a network of committed partners to lead the way.
The Library of Congress cannot raise all of the funding or garner all of the
in-kind contributions that will be needed to create a World Digital Library
on this scale. We have a large and skilled workforce, but we do not have
the translators, programmers, web designers, subject matter experts, and
other specialists that will be required for this effort.
Not least, while the international and foreign language collections
of the Library of Congress are huge, we do not have the most important
collections of cultural materials from countries around the world that
will need to be scanned for inclusion in a World Digital Library.
For this reason, we need to work with partners to build capacity – to
install equipment and train staff – so that institutions in these
countries can select and digitize the material for the World Digital
Library, material, that I might add, which under the non-exclusivity
principle that we are following and have always followed in our digital
library partnerships, also can be used to develop national and regional
digital library projects.
In sum, I hope that many of the questions regarding the World Digital
Library largely answer themselves as we go forward with an effort this
complex and this ambitious. It will have to be a cooperative effort,
engaging the skills and taking into account the interests of all potential
partners, otherwise it will not succeed. The only way it can live up
to the vision that many of us have for this project is to enlist the
support and enthusiastic participation of a broad community of librarians,
scholars, and private and governmental funders. With UNESCO’s
help, we hope to begin building that support in this important meeting.
These points need to be elaborated and discussed in detail. We will
begin this process tomorrow morning at UNESCO headquarters. I look forward
to seeing many of you there, and to hearing your ideas and suggestions.
In closing, I have a letter from Laura Bush, the First Lady of the
United States, a teacher and a librarian, a strong supporter of both
the Library of Congress and UNESCO, and a person who is taking an active
interest in this initiative, particularly as it relates to her key concern
of promoting literacy.
Text
of the First Lady's letter on the World Digital Library
Thank you for your attention. I look forward to your comments and
suggestions, and to working with all of you in realizing
this ambitious effort.
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