BABINO, Republic of North Macedonia — Most
people packed up and left the remote North Macedonia village of Babino years
ago.
But Stevo Stepanovski and his remarkable collection
of 20,000 books stayed put in his almost abandoned valley.
اضافة اعلان
The library began with Stepanovski’s
great-grandfather who was given his first tranche of books by passing Ottoman
soldiers in the late 19th century.
Along with history books and novels in the
Macedonian language, there are tomes in Farsi, Arabic, and Turkish along with a
whole host of books in Serbo-Croat, the main language of the old Yugoslavia of
which the village was once a part.
The library is home to original photographs by a
journalist who covered World War I, antique maps, and a Babel of dictionaries
covering the region’s many languages.
“This is a village of enlightenment and education,”
said Stepanovski, 72, who regularly welcomes guests with cups of coffee and
shots of homemade fruit brandy in the centuries-old stone home where the
library is housed.
The library helped make the villagers highly
literate, with an inordinately large number of them becoming teachers.
‘No house without a teacher’
“There was no house without
a teacher,” according to Stepanovski.
But their very learning was also the village’s
undoing.
In the 1950s, the Yugoslav government called up the
valley’s teachers for a nationwide literacy drive — effectively robbing the
area of much of its population.
Like much of this impoverished corner of southeastern
Europe, North Macedonia has been clobbered by a demographic slump.
The triple whammy of an aging population, sinking
birth rate and mass migration has left many villages across its rural
hinterland abandoned.
Babino has been hit particularly hard. Once it had
more than 800 inhabitants, but now there are just three permanent residents.
And while Stepanovski’s adult children have moved
elsewhere, he is determined to stay on with his books in Babino.
Instead the world comes to him, with between 3,000
and 3,500 people a year visiting the library.
Most come from nearby towns and villages or from
neighboring countries, but there are also occasional travelers from Brazil,
Egypt and Morocco along with a host of literary scholars and researchers.
“I am surprised titles can be found here that cannot
be found in city libraries,” said Goce Sekuloski, a music professor at a
seminary in the capital Skopje who visited Babino recently after hearing about
the place from friends.
Stepanovski has also built a small amphitheater for
public readings and concerts.
“We offer a peaceful mindset for people to come and
sit here and experience the atmosphere,” he said.
“If you want to discover the magic of books ... you
can do that perfectly here.”
Read more Books
Jordan News