From the Past: President Obama’s 2005 Address at the ALA Annual Conference

This keynote address was given by Barak Obama at the 2005 ALA Annual Conference in Chicago. He was a U.S. Senator from Illinois at this time.

From the Address:

More than a building that houses books and data, the library represents a window to a larger world, the place where we’ve always come to discover big ideas and profound concepts that help move the American story forward and the human story forward. That’s the reason why, since ancient antiquity, whenever those who seek power would want to control the human spirit, they have gone after libraries and books. Whether it’s the ransacking of the great library at Alexandria, controlling information during the Middle Ages, book burnings, or the imprisonment of writers in former communist block countries, the idea has been that if we can control the word, if we can control what people hear and what they read and what they comprehend, then we can control and imprison them, or at least imprison their minds.

Source: ALA

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