Kalimat Foundation & ‘1001 Titles’ preparing to issue 200 e-books
May 5, 2019
The Sharjah-based non-profit Kalimat Foundation for Children’s Empowerment (KF) and Knowledge without Borders (KwB)’s cultural initiative – ‘1001 Titles’, have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to promote the publication of accessible learning materials for print disabled children in the UAE and Arab region.
The MoU stipulates that 1001 Titles will support the production of 200 accessible Epub3 books. It will fall under KF’s ‘Ara’ (I See) initiative (which was launched to promote awareness about the issues of blind and visually impaired children) and further KF’s overarching vision to empower children with special needs by facilitating their access to knowledge.
The MoU was signed at the ongoing Sharjah Children’s Reading Festival (SCRF 2019) yesterday by Amna Al Mazmi, Manager of Kalimat Foundation for Children Empowerment and Majd Al Shehhi, Manager of 1001 Titles. It was attended by Hugo Setzer, President of the International Publishers Association (IPA); Sheikha Bodour bint Sultan Al Qasimi, Vice President of IPA; and Rashid Al Kous, Executive Director of Emirates Publishers Association (EPA).
Ten publishers from the UAE and the wider Arab region will be leading this publishing initiative. From the UAE, the publishers are Kalimat Group, Al Hudhud, Al Aalam Al Arabi, Sama Publishing, Al Hekayat, and Al Fulk. Joining them from Egypt is Al Balsam; from Saudi Arabia, Kadi, Al Ramadi; and from Jordan, Al Salwa.
The workshop ended with every publisher signing the ABC Charter for Accessible Publishing, formalising their commitment to joining forces with ABC to further ABC’s commitment through their businesses.
“The growing availability of e-books and other digital publications provides an unprecedented opportunity for people with print disabilities to become the readers of such publications and for them to enjoy an ever-broadening diversity of books. Publishers in the UAE and the region need to be empowered to ride the wave of digital innovations to benefit themselves and their audiences” said Amna Al Mazmi.
“Making learning resources readily available to blind and visually impaired children is a top priority for us; it is what ‘Ara’ was established for. We are excited about forming this partnership with 1001 Titles, and look forward to having their support in the production of the 200 Epub3 books that are a part of the MoU’s commitment,” she added.
In response, Majd Al Shehhi said: “We are proud to be part of this noble and important initiative. Our support to the publication of the 200 titles in accessible format for the print disabled is in line with our commitment to enriching the local and regional literary landscape by enabling publishers to produce high quality, original content. As organisations dedicated to literary creation that boost people’s access to knowledge and sources of learning, it is imperative that we apply comprehensive and more inclusive strategies to make learning equally accessible to all.”
Earlier this month, ‘Ara’ donated a total of 400 titles in audiobook, large-print and braille formats across four schools in Jordan.
Since its inception in April 2016, Kalimat Foundation has been engaged in an extensive programme of launching and implementing initiatives that facilitate the provision of public libraries and replenishing refugee camps with books. It seeks to give children in disadvantaged areas, access to sources of knowledge, in keeping with its dedication to ensuring every child’s right to read. KF believes in the positive impact of books on creating a future knowledge-based Arab generation that has a broad understanding of its own and of global cultures.
A celebration of literacy for the disadvantaged and visually disabled:
the first six years in summary
‘As for the public response to initiatives, following the September 2017 Pledge a Library launch, the foundation received 100 promises for donations in its first ten days – testament to the country’s respect for reading, literature and culture.’
Kalimat Foundation began operations in 2016, to protect the rights of vulnerable and visually disabled children, and their ability to access books. The period was marked by obdurate civil conflict in the Middle East, including Syria, from where large populations fled to new countries and new cultural contexts. The same decade was also signified by growing requests from host nations for Arabic literature. Hand in hand with this call to action, to serve children in new territories and communities, came the step to support the literacy of visually impaired and blind youth, again underserved in their access to suitable reading material.
The paths taken by Pledge a Library and Ara; the foundation’s two main distribution programmes have often faced challenge. Regarding Pledge a Library, administering logistics was sometimes hard, as was receiving approvals where security concerns arose, particularly in public libraries and refugee camps. With Ara, decisions and book deliveries were hampered by obstacles ranging from a lack of guidelines supporting the production of accessible books, to a dearth in population demographics and scant information on organisations that serve those children.
Kalimat Foundation’s credibility has, nonetheless, been widely recognised, thanks to the standing of Kalimat Group in publishing and in the capacity for tailoring books based upon recipient demands. With effort, diligence and assistance from the United Arab Emirates’ foreign missions, intergovernmental and NGO partners; books have since made their way, or been committed to, migrant camps, migrant and community centres, libraries, schools and hospitals around the world. Here is a brief summary on progress over the past six years.
Outset Programme at Emirati Jordanian Camp and Eid with Them
In May 2017, a singular 1,000 book donation – a forerunner to Pledge a Library – made to Emirati Jordanian camp, was followed by another visit in September, with the purpose of celebrating the Islamic Eid Al Adha festival with the children.
These occasions, delivering insight to the existence that refugees live, and the lack of literary resources, spurred the further development of the foundation’s book distribution programming.
Pledge a Library and Ara
As for the public response to initiatives, following the September 2017 Pledge a Library launch, the foundation received 100 promises for donations in its first ten days – testament to the country’s respect for reading, literature and culture.
A first shipment of collections to Paris in March 2018, resulted in their utility for the country’s national Arabic reading competition. One of our readership swept first prize and gained entry to the Arab Reading Challenge in Dubai. Following Paris, requests came pouring in for Pledge a Library, where the foundation’s response transformed in a manner, to quenching a thirst for books. Europe subsequently became an arena needing significant literacy support in Arabic. In Italy, to help bridge the cultural gap, bilingual books were produced as result of partnership between Gallucci Publishing and Kalimat Group.
Jordan’s refugee camps on the other hand represented a different reality where schooling and education were more limited in resources. It is possibly for this reason that our books were integrated into extracurricular programmes.
Consequently, the library at Emirati Jordanian camp became a social hub for its boys and girls who, excited with the arrival of new book collections, stated their wish for all-night sit-ins and sleepovers. Further north at Zaatari, the foundation donated 20 libraries to Blumont, a humanitarian organisation, to help build a respectable collection providing for the settlement’s large population. Book clubs, storytelling gatherings and character role plays subsequently became new community repertories here, as they did in other parts of the world receiving donations. Added to this, with the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic and the restrictions on movement, books became a useful aid to while time away for the children to read in their caravan homes.
With the Ara programme, in 2018 the foundation undertook a regional survey to gain a first-hand understanding of resources and needs amongst visually disabled child populations. Close to 20,000 youngsters were identified, together with information on age groups, teaching resources, teaching methods, literature available, literature in demand and the capacity to use technology.
Research data provided a privileged view upon which our strategy is based. A partnership agreement with the Accessible Books Consortium on collaboration for accessible publishing in Arabic, followed suit in November 2018. Training in born-accessible production was provided to regional imprints five months later with the aim of increasing the availability of accessible Arabic titles.
In reflection of the advances made by Ara, the programme was shortlisted for its first time at the Accessible Books Consortium International Excellence Awards in February 2020 under the initiative category. Furthermore, following the production of 100 books in Arabic using the EPUB3 format in April 2020, the foundation began on the preparations and submissions necessary for access to the ABC Global Book Service, the objective of which being to expand its accessible publishing remit.
Leveraging support following the onset of COVID-19
Progress did not come without witnessing some of the harsh realities experienced by those that the foundation serves. A number of youngsters in refugee camps for instance, evidencing prodigious talent redoubled by blazing ambition, are limited in their access to material that would otherwise help them advance. English literature, grammar, science and maths being examples. Where the foundation has not been able to offer direct support, it has taken requests and amplified needs to international organisations capable of such provision. In this regard we do our best to extend help within our networks.
Reeling from the effects of the pandemic, 2020 was a hard year, not least for global publishing and those whom Kalimat Foundation works to serve. The ecosystem was thrown into flux carving out new considerations and new equilibrium. Books continued to be delivered to the Hekaya Arts literary initiative in Kenya where the schooling system was severely affected, and to Siilaanyo National Library in Hargeisa in the Somaliland region. Active communication continued with a number of beneficiaries across the globe, whose operations were also badly interrupted.
During lockdown, the foundation’s strategy with Ara, to give every child material in braille, large print and audio worked particularly well with one-on-one reading where parents in some instances used the large print, or listened to audio recordings, while their son or daughter read braille.
Notwithstanding the benefits delivered in print formats; e-books and digital libraries started to become very popular. As such the distribution objective turned to allocating resources to print and digital publishing on an equal split.
2021 represented sustained forward advance in supporting literacy. With the development of accessible digital publishing and traditional formats, the year witnessed expansion into Africa and further afield. In this regard, we were delighted to announce partnership with Book Aid International to help cement the effective achievement in our planning and distribution.
2022: stepping up and beyond the clouds
With typically relentless commitment, the operational team continued to make the opportunities for literacy amongst disadvantaged and visually disabled Arabic-speaking youth more viable in 2022. By September that hard work culminated in landmark achievement, in the license granted by the United Arab Emirates Ministry of Economy to publish titles in accessible formats. According to the statutes of the Marrakesh Treaty, when it comes to accessible book production, Kalimat Foundation can utilise and share publications through a global repository, representing an immeasurable wealth of literary resource.
In October 2022, the Accessible Books Consortium (ABC) granted the foundation authorised entity status, allowing privileged use of its Global Book Service. As for the following month, November, Ara was shortlisted for the second time at the ABC Excellence Awards for Accessible Publishing under the initiatives category.
Today Kalimat Foundation has 113 digital accessible titles to its name, all of which are in e-book format, targetting Arabic speakers of school-going age, between three and 17 years.
Maintaining pace and momentum at the end of 2022, the total books donated by the foundation in both print and accessible formats, evidenced a rise of 43% on the previous year. New territories for distribution included Nigeria, Kenya, Ethiopia and Morocco, affirming further commitment in Africa.
The Kalimat Foundation team
Sheikha Bodour bint Sultan Al Qasimi
Chairperson of the Board of Trustees and President of American University of Sharjah
In January 2023, Sheikha Bodour was appointed Chairperson of the Board of Trustees and President of American University of Sharjah to align the institution with Sharjah’s socio-economic, workforce, and innovation priorities. She is working to achieve excellence in teaching, research, and public service to develop global citizen graduates who become future leaders in their communities, the United Arab Emirates, and the world.Sheikha Bodour is forging deeper university-industry R&D and commercialization collaboration as Chairperson of the Board and President of the Sharjah Research, Technology, and Innovation Park (SRTIP). She oversees SRTIP’s $150 million push to position Sharjah as a global leader in emerging technology fields.
As Chairperson of the Sharjah Investment and Development Authority, Sheikha Bodour has mobilized more than $4 billion in foreign direct investment, created more than 20,000 jobs and contributed to a 78 percent growth in Sharjah’s gross domestic product. Her work as Chairperson of Sharjah Entrepreneurship Center (Sheraa) is accelerating the development of Sharjah’s entrepreneurship ecosystem and has supported 150 startups that have raised $128 million in investment and created 1,400 jobs.
Sheikha Bodour was appointed Chairperson of Sharjah Book Authority in May 2023 to solidify Sharjah’s status as an emerging global publishing hub. Sharjah Book Authority manages the Sharjah International Book Fair, the world’s largest book fair, and operates Sharjah Publishing City, the world’s first free trade zone for publishing.
Sheikha Bodour established the Emirates Publishers Association, UAE Board on Books for Young People and Knowledge Without Borders to boost the growth of the UAE’s $300+ million publishing sector. She founded Kalimat Publishing Group, a global, multi-imprint publishing and edtech company with licensing and distribution in more than 15 countries. She also chaired the Sharjah World Book Capital 2019 Committee and led efforts to establish the Emirates Reprographic Rights Management Association.
Sheikha Bodour served as the International Publishers Association’s second-ever female and first-ever Arab President since the influential global association’s founding in 1896. She also founded PublisHer, a 1,000+ member global community of female publishing leaders addressing publishing’s diversity and inclusion challenges.
Sheikha Bodour is taking action on the world’s most pressing challenges through her involvement in international organizations. She has leveraged these global platforms to catalyze action on youth education and employment, female entrepreneurship, small and medium-size enterprise development, expanding funding for the cultural industries, and climate change.
Lana Nusseibeh
Board of Trustees Member
Ambassador Lana Nusseibeh presented her credentials as Ambassador and Permanent Representative of the United Arab Emirates to the United Nations in New York in September 2013. She also presented her credentials as non-resident Ambassador of the UAE to Grenada in November 2017. Ambassador Nusseibeh served as Co-Chair of the Intergovernmental Negotiations on Security Council Reform for three sessions of the UN General Assembly from 2017 to 2020.
She previously served as Vice-President of the General Assembly for the 72nd session. She has also served as President of the UN Women Executive Board in 2017, as Co-facilitator of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Revitalization of the UN General Assembly for the 71st session of the General Assembly, and as Co-facilitator for the overall review of the implementation of the outcomes of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in 2015.
Alongside the Permanent Representative of the United Kingdom, Ambassador Nusseibeh Co-Chairs the Friends of the Future of the UN (FFUN), a small group of Permanent Representatives who convene regularly for briefings and unscripted, substantive discussions on the most pressing issues affecting the future of the organization. In 2017, she was awarded the UAE Prime Minister’s Government Excellence Award (the UAE Medal of Pride).
Prior to her appointment as Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Nusseibeh served in several capacities within the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs, establishing the Ministry’s Policy Planning Department in 2009 and serving as its first Director for three years. During this time, she was also the UAE Deputy Sherpa at the G20 Leaders’ Summit under the Presidency of France in 2011. From 2010 –2011, she also served as the UAE Co-Special Envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan. Previously, she was the Head of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) Campaign Task Force at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Director of Research and Communications for the Ministry of State for Federal National Council Affairs.
Ambassador Nusseibeh received an MA (Cantab) and BA (Hons) in History from the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, and an MA with Distinction in Israeli and Jewish Diaspora Studies from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London in 2003. She is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Emirates Diplomatic Academy, Treasurer on the Board of Directors of Security Council Report (SCR), and serves on the Advisory Board of The London School of Economics’ Middle East Centre.
Majid H. Jafar
Treasurer
Majid Jafar is the CEO of Crescent Petroleum, the Middle East’s oldest private oil & gas company, and Vice-Chairman of the Crescent Group of companies which includes interests in port management, logistics, venture capital, private equity and real estate. He is also Managing Director of the Board of Dana Gas (PJSC), the leading publicly-listed natural gas company in the Middle East, in which Crescent is the largest shareholder.
His previous experience was with Shell International’s Exploration & Production and Gas & Power Divisions. In addition to his professional commitments, Majid Jafar is an advocate of responsible energy and sustainable development, and serves on the Energy Business Council of the International Energy Agency (IEA), the Advisory Board of the Responsible Energy Forum, the Stewardship Board of the Global System on Energy at the World Economic Forum, and the Board of Trustees of the Arab Forum for Environment and Development (AFED). He promotes education and youth employment and is a Board Member of the Queen Rania Foundation and the Kalimat Foundation for Children’s Empowerment, as well as a founding patron of the Prince’s Trust International. He also serves on the Panel of Senior Advisers of the Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House) in London, the International Advisory Board of The Atlantic Council in Washington DC, and the Board of Fellows of Harvard Medical School, and is a member of the GCC Board Directors Institute and the Young Presidents Organization (YPO), an Accredited Director of the Institute of Directors (IoD Mudara),and has been named a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum.
Majid Jafar attended Eton College and graduated from Cambridge University (Churchill College) with Bachelor and Masters Degrees in Engineering (Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics). He also holds an MA (with Distinction) in International Studies and Diplomacy from the University of London’s School of Oriental & African Studies (SOAS), an MBA (with Distinction) from the Harvard Business School, and an Executive Certificate in Public Policy from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.
Isobel Abulhoul
Secretary General
Isobel Abulhoul has lived in Dubai since 1968 and co-founded Magrudy’s, a bookshop chain, in 1975 which is still thriving and has eight bookshops across the UAE. In 2008 Isobel founded the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature, the Middle East’s largest celebration of the written and spoken word. In 2013, HH Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, and also the Festival’s patron, issued a Decree establishing the Emirates Literature Foundation, naming Isobel as one of the trustees on the Board and holds the position of CEO.
She is also a Trustee of the International Prize for Arabic Fiction Board, Secretary General of the Kalimat Foundation and a director of the Board for the Mohammed Bin Rashid Library. In addition, Isobel has been elected to the Supreme National Committee for Tolerance and has been selected as a member of the Police Advisory Council for Community Service.
Isobel has received several awards and accolades over the years such as Cultural Personality of the Year by Dr. HH Sheikh Sultan Bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, the Ruler of Sharjah in 2010, and the prestigious OBE award by HM Queen Elizabeth of Great Britain in 2012. Isobel’s passion and drive for culture, education and literature remains as strong as ever.
Jameela Al Qasimi
Vice Chairperson
Sheikha Jameela Al Qasimi is Director General of Sharjah City for Humanitarian Services. Her work involves advocating disability rights in education, employment, rehabilitation, recreationand sports. In this regard, she has dedicated her work to promote community advancement and social development for such persons of determination, through awareness, integration, and empowerment.
Accordingly, throughout a career centred in community cohesiveness and strength, she has presided over programme strategies, driven innovation and headed public campaigns, resulting in greater social inclusion for persons with disabilities, in the Emirates and in the region. Further to her bachelor’s degree in psychology, Sheikha Jameela graduated with a master’s in business administration.
Founder & Chairperson's welcome
When the father of a visually impaired boy recently shared his story with me about the positive transformation in his son’s life thanks to Kalimat Foundation’s (KF) donations of braille books to his school in Sharjah, it strengthened my belief in the critical role literacy plays in our children’s lives and reinforced my commitment to make KF a force for good. Stories like these fill my heart with joy and strengthen my resolve to build on our vision.
Since its inception six years ago, our goal has been to give disadvantaged, displaced, and visually disabled Arab children access to books and knowledge regionally and globally. Our goal is rooted in the firm belief that reading and literacy are every child’s right; no matter their circumstances, children should not be deprived of this opportunity.
Guided by this spirit, we have led many initiatives through books and stories to create a new world of possibilities in the life of every child we reach. However, in 2022, we achieved an unprecedented milestone. KF was the first non-profit Organization in the UAE to be authorized by the Ministry of Economy to facilitate open access to published works to the visually impaired and print-disabled in line with the terms of the Marrakesh Treaty administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).
This license allows us to build on our work with visually impaired children. For example, 30,000 books in print braille, large print, and audio, in addition to 113 digital accessible titles in Epub3 format were donated by KF last year, signifying a rise of 43% in the total number of books distributed by the end of 2021. New territories for distribution include ,Palestine, Egypt, and Algeria in Africa, as well as the United States, the receiver being the National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled – Library of Congress, in Washington DC.
Our partnerships with the United Arab Emirates Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation and Book Aid International as part of our global distribution strategy have been another essential feature marking 2022. In addition, to support the national objectives in accessible literature programming, KF also signed memorandums of association with the Emirates Association of the Visually Impaired, Sharjah’s House of Wisdom, and Sharjah Public Libraries.
Although we are driven primarily by our mission to serve, it was still gratifying to be recognized globally by the Accessible Books Consortium (ABC). KF’s Ara (I see) initiative was shortlisted for the second time at the ABC Excellence Awards for Accessible Publishing in the initiative category. This recognition signals that we are on the right track and reenergizes our partners and us to continue.
KF remains on course with its mission of asserting the right of all children to read and enjoy stories, including children in disadvantaged situations. We will continue building on our regional governments’ investment in digital infrastructure and continue our work to disseminate learning and knowledge through every available channel. We hope that the children we reach find the light and courage to transform their lives through the stories they read and open a new chapter in their journey and that of their families.
Bodour Al Qasimi, Founder and Chairperson
Founder & Chairperson's welcome
As a publisher and a mother, seeing my children’s eyes light up when they open a book for the first time, I find it hard to accept that millions of boys and girls are still not able to benefit from the joy that reading presents. It has subsequently become my mission, to deliver books into the hands of underserved youth in the region and worldwide, with the belief that we owe vulnerable young minds a better narrative in life.
Reading ignites curiosity, sparks the imagination, encourages dialogue and opens the doors to a variety of creative possibilities. I want to bring this magic into as many lives as possible. In 2016, I launched Kalimat Foundation to empower underprivileged children through books, with the expectation that this might lead toward literacy and more prosperous futures. In honour of this pursuit, we have since sent collections to communities in rural areas, hospitals, orphanages, refugee camps, libraries and schools. Our greatest distribution efforts are for displaced children from the Middle East, largely affected by war, and those with visual disabilities. The contribution toward the former aims to preserve the cultural identity for ones separated from their homelands, and to promote the region’s heritage and the Arabic language. For the blind and visually impaired, the objective is to develop literacy to advance self-dependence and integration into society.
Every project and programme launched revolves around our purpose. We have in total, committed and delivered a touch above 22,400 books in 23 countries. Through the ‘Pledge a Library’ initiative, 12,500 books have been donated offering access to an approximate 89,000 youngsters in four continents. We have further received delightful news of the evolution of book clubs comprising our titles, in recipient locations around the world. With Ara, meaning ‘I see’ in Arabic, the foundation offers audio, large-print, and print braille books to visually disabled boys and girls, and their families in order that they read, or listen to, stories together.
Correspondingly, insight is offered in this report on our activity, progress, international footprint, recipient and partner input, as well as statistics on book distribution. I am grateful to our partners, for the diligence and support given in advising where to deliver books and libraries, and for their involvement in publishing. I would also like to thank our sponsors for the very generous donations, making this endeavour for knowledge possible. Covid-19 has been exceptionally challenging for children’s education and the drive toward literacy. It has accelerated the need to develop online technologies in reading support – a format that is being called for, from places as far afield as Zaatari refugee camp in northern Jordan to São Paulo in Brazil.
We shall continue to work very hard to nurture underserved boys and girls, to promote reading’s transformative potential, and pass on the best of our living culture. A better future sits between the pages of many books. The purpose that began as a seed in a mother’s mind, is now a global movement that we hope will take root, diversify and grow. Our ultimate goal is to close the literacy gap and drive more equitable futures for those who experience tremendous difficulties at a young age.
Bodour Al Qasimi, Founder and Chairperson
Keeping in touch with the future as the world advances
‘The key is always education. If children who are blind, visually impaired or otherwise print disabled can complete their schooling and experience no barriers in obtaining a higher education, the sky is the limit.’
The universe in which visually disabled children are educated, and cared for, requires substantial attention to needs. One that is embodied by manifest purpose, to guide and set a path for those whose worlds are shrouded in darkness, or obscurity, and where light, colour and form can be non-existent. Managing the futures of youth with such incapacity hence demands great responsibility. Where Kalimat Foundation has offered its support in aiding literacy, we have asked programme partners and recipients on some of the outcomes resulting from Ara interventions.
In respect to organisations that have benefited from, and supported Ara, their remits are often wide-ranging and include schooling and enrolment into education, life skills development, health, welfare and the progression of accessible publishing. In the Middle East context, where books in Arabic are often not readily available, Kalimat Foundation has worked to identify how best it can encourage reading.
With regard to Ara’s distribution, the giving of accessible books in different formats, namely braille, large print and audio is widely recognised as being a key advantage, to cater to both visually impaired and blind audiences. In addition, amongst recipients, the availability of audio books has been particularly supportive, for the reason that it allows sharing and understanding amongst people of differing abilities. In reference to the foundation’s large print books, these have been distinguished by their visible lettering, spacing, and colour schemes, for clear legibility, according to Anjad Zahdeh of the Blind Charitable Society in Hebron.
On the other hand, significant emphasis is given on the provision of books in print braille format, a costly publishing resource in some parts of the Middle East. This factor pointed to by Khaled Al Ahmed, assistant director at Al Noor School in Kuwait City, has been much valued when positioned against both the suitability of titles for the school’s pupils and the respective outlay it would require in purchasing such material.
The Emirates Association of the Visually Impaired, amongst whose objectives it is to build skills for productive lives, is a partner and beneficiary on the Ara programme. This organisation, guides on the correct use of braille language in Arabic, and prints Kalimat titles in braille. Commenting on the foundation’s work, Mais Ahmed of the EAVI mentions that effort amongst institutions to support publishing for the visually disabled develops greater awareness, open mindedness and acceptance, resulting in integration throughout society. Such beliefs are echoed by Majd Al Shehhi, initiatives director at 1001 Titles, a publishing programme and collaborator with Ara, that aims to encourage creativity in authoring in the Emirates, and develop recognition for accessible books.
Ara continued to spread its wings in 2021 and 2022, through wider global reach and the integration of digital accessible content, underpinning the foundation’s new license to publish and extending access to more visually disabled readers. On this matter, Monica Lövblad, head of the Accessible Books Consortium, asserts that in the employment of technology, publishers can make their books born accessible, and hence available from the beginning to the visually disabled. If born accessible publishing is not available, she continues, source digital files could be offered to libraries or associations for the blind that own the resources to convert literature more easily to the right formats.
As for expectations on what the blind and visually impaired could achieve if reading technologies were made available, ‘The key is always education’ continues Ms. Lövblad, ‘If children who are blind, visually impaired or otherwise print disabled, can complete their schooling and experience no barriers in obtaining a higher education, the sky is the limit.’
Through working hard, and in keeping faithful to the literacy needs of those who cannot see, the foundation has taken strides to ensure that blind and visually impaired youth stay in touch with the future, in order that they keep step with the world as it advances.
Communities bound by books
‘We have had on two occasions girls come to the library and literally jump up and down with joy when they saw the books.’
Three and half years on from its November 2017 launch, Pledge a Library partners and recipients have commented on results arising from book donations. A number of common gains have emerged, some of which were foreseen from the outset, while others have transpired with time. The development of literacy in Arabic and its contribution to formal education, is considered a key benefit amongst organisations receiving books on the Pledge a Library programme. In northern Jordan’s Zaatari camp, housing a population of about 80,000 refugees from Syria, Blumont, a not-for-profit organisation responsible for a community-based protection project, manages the libraries sent by Kalimat Foundation.
According to Siraj Al-Hmoud, the senior camp manager, up to 2,000 children aged from two to 17 years old, have access to the books. Through Blumont’s Tiger reading club, literacy has become an integral component to a holistic learning framework constituting Arabic and English languages, ICT and art. Outreach programmes that push into Zaatari’s districts by way of mobile libraries, have also been implemented to foster community spirit. Libraries in the refugee camp have subsequently become a cornerstone of everyday life, in which children, parents, businesses and institutions all partake in lending and reading opportunities.
Elsewhere, in East Africa, in the Somaliland region, Siilaanyo public library in Hargeisa, hosts 30 schools and 120 pupils a week, where the foundation’s books occupy a children’s corner used in group reading sessions. Hargeisa is a city that accommodates migrant communities from the Horn of Africa, who find residence for economic purpose, or who arrive having been displaced because of conflict, insecurity or drought. The public library is as such a unique service providing a formative stage for literacy development. In Kenya, Hekaya Arts’ Sona Sama initiative, has plans to employ the collection donated to it, to encourage a multilingual reading culture encompassing Kiswahili, English and Arabic amongst schools in its network. Accordingly, the progression of language education in Africa, has embodied a new phase in Pledge a Library’s evolution. Social interaction, community development and achievement amongst migrant groups, reflects another key role for the programme.
In Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy two sisters amongst Kalimat Foundation’s book readership in France, came first and third in the country’s 2018 national Arabic language reading competition. For Tasnim, the elder sibling, 12 years old at the time, the accomplishment gained her participation at the Arab Reading Challenge in Dubai, in the same year. It is for a similar purpose; to prepare for the international competition, that children have visited Athens-based We Need Books, an NGO providing multilingual libraries for the city’s residents. Beyond this, states Ioanna Nissiriou, co-founder of the Greek reading initiative, ‘We have had on two occasions girls come to the library and literally jump up and down with joy when they saw the books.’
Strengthening cultural ties thus forms another bedrock of the programme, where preserving homeland traditions is seen as key to cementing belonging and developing confidence. One partner vested in the Pledge a Library programme is Italy’s section of the International Board on Books for Young People. With regard to migrant and refugee communities, Marcella Terrusi, an IBBY volunteer and assistant professor in education at the University of Bologna states the importance of reading in the mother tongue, and keeping links with identity and origins, to improve prospects in later life. She goes on to assert that in linguistics, studies suggest that youngsters should sustain the native language in order to learn a new one. Parallel language development, hence considered a critical factor for integration, was further aided by the production of bilingual titles in Arabic and Italian, through partnership between Italy’s Gallucci publishing and Kalimat Group. Hence in 11 libraries across Italy, in cities, villages and islands, the Pledge a Library collections are understood to form a bridge, leading toward development, stability and growth.
In similar vein in Brazil, Deise Zanardi of SP Leituras, the São Paulo Association of Libraries and Reading, an NGO whose objective it is to promote culture, reading and literature, goes further to comment, that learning about others – an important theme running through Kalimat books – is encouraged amongst children from varying national backgrounds when they come and visit.
The holding onto cultural bonds marks the purpose for which São Paolo’s Escola Islâmica Brasileira was founded by Lebanese migrants, states Imam Al Bukai, one of its directors, where the foundation’s books are seen as fitting its purpose.
The availability of print books has constituted another paramount benefit amongst recipients, particularly in poorer areas where electricity and mobile data access are limited; a point reinforced by Clair Bradley, trusts and foundation manager of the United Kingdom’s Book Aid International, responsible for the Hargeisa book delivery. Similarly, Abdulrahman Ndegwa, managing director and curator of the Hekaya Arts Initiative identifies the intimacy and closeness that books in physical form engender, ‘Closeness, as we say, breeds affection, and affection breeds love.’ A closeness and love that many parents will recognise, in the level of absorption that their children derive in reading, and more, their desire to narrate stories just read.
Pledge a Library moved further ahead in 2021 and 2022, extending its reach to places where underserved youngsters need books in the Arabic language. In the provision of libraries, and of engaging stories and characters; the drive for equitable literacy is expected to accelerate. So is the forging of gains so far realised and new gains to come, leading to more literate, more confident persons in adulthood and the better ability to face a future world.
Lana Nusseibeh
Board of Trustees Member
Ambassador Lana Zaki Nusseibeh has served as the United Arab Emirates Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the United Nations since September 2013. She has also served as Assistant Minister for Political Affairs since February 2021 and non-resident Ambassador of the UAE to Grenada since November 2017. In December 2021, the late His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan issued a Federal Decree granting her the rank of Minister. In January 2023, she was appointed as the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation’s Special Envoy to the United Nations, and the European Union.
A particular area of passion for her is the role of women in the promotion of peace and security. She was the President of the UN Women Executive Board in 2017 and led the UAE in working closely with UN Women to launch the Arab Women Military and Peacekeeping Programme in the UAE in 2019.
She served as Vice-President of the UN’s 72nd General Assembly and was a Co-Chair of the Intergovernmental Negotiations on Security Council reform in the 72nd, 73rd, and 74th sessions.
As an expression of the UAE’s commitment to multilateralism and the UN’s continued vitality and efficacy, Ambassador Nusseibeh co-facilitates and co-chairs the Friends of the Future of the UN (FFUN), a small group of Permanent Representatives who convene regularly for briefings and discussions on the most pressing issues affecting the future of the organization as part of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Revitalization of the UN General Assembly.
Even before her appointment as Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Nusseibeh was guided by a commitment to public service. At the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, she established the Ministry’s Policy Planning Department in 2009 and served as its first Director for three years. During this time, she was also the UAE Deputy Sherpa to the G20 under France’s presidency in 2011. From 2010 – 2011, she served as the UAE Co-Special Envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Previously, she was the Head of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) Campaign Task Force at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, and Director of Research and Communications for the Ministry of State for Federal National Council Affairs.
In 2017, she was awarded the UAE Prime Minister’s Government Excellence Award (the UAE Medal of Pride).
Ambassador Nusseibeh received an MA (Cantab) and BA (Hons) in History from the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, and an MA with Distinction in Israeli and Jewish Diaspora Studies from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London in 2003.
She is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy, Treasurer on the Board of Directors of Security Council Report (SCR), and serves on the Advisory Board of The London School of Economics’ Middle East Centre, and on the Advisory Board of Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS).
Celebrating five years in furthering literacy
‘As for the public response to initiatives, following the September 2017 Pledge a Library launch, the foundation received 100 promises for donations in its first ten days – testament to the country’s respect for the importance of reading and literature.’
Kalimat Foundation began operations in 2016, to protect the rights of vulnerable and visually disabled children, and their ability to access books. The period was marked by obdurate civil conflict in the Middle East, including Syria, from where large populations fled to new countries and new cultural contexts. The same decade was also signified by growing requests from host nations for Arabic literature. Hand in hand with this call to action, to serve children in new territories and communities, came the step to support the literacy of visually impaired and blind youth, again underserved in their access to suitable reading material.
The paths taken by our Pledge a Library and Ara programmes, have not been without challenge. Regarding Pledge a Library, administering logistics was sometimes very hard, as was receiving approvals where security concerns arose, particularly in public libraries and refugee camps. With Ara, decisions and book deliveries were hampered by obstacles ranging from a lack of guidelines supporting the production of accessible books, to a dearth in population demographics and scant information on organisations that serve those children.
Kalimat Foundation’s credibility has, nonetheless, been widely recognised, thanks to the standing of Kalimat Group in publishing and in the capacity for tailoring books based upon recipient demands. With effort, diligence and assistance from the United Arab Emirates’ foreign missions, 22,405 books have since made their way, or been committed to, migrant camps, migrant and community centres, libraries, schools and hospitals around the world. Here is a brief summary on how we have progressed on programming in the past five years.
Outset programme at Emirati-Jordanian camp and Eid with them
In May 2017, a singular 1,000 book donation made to Emirati-Jordanian camp, a forerunner to Pledge a Library, was followed by a subsequent visit in September, with the purpose of celebrating the Islamic Eid Al Adha festival with its children.
These occasions, delivering insight to the existence that refugees live, and the lack of literary resources, spurred the further development of the foundation’s book distribution programming.
Pledge a Library and Ara
As for the public response to initiatives, following the September 2017 Pledge a Library launch, the foundation received 100 promises for donations in its first ten days – testament to the country’s respect for the importance of reading, literature and culture.
A first shipment of collections to Paris in March 2018, resulted in their utility for the country’s national Arabic reading competition. One of our readership swept first prize and gained entry to the Arab Reading Challenge in Dubai. Following Paris, requests came pouring in for Pledge a Library, where the foundation’s response transformed in a manner, to quenching a thirst for books. Europe became an arena needing literacy support in Arabic, though welfare systems tend to be robust. In Italy, to help bridge the cultural gap, bilingual books were produced as result of partnership between Gallucci Publishing and Kalimat Group.
Jordan’s refugee camps on the other hand represented a different reality where schooling and education have been more limited. It is possibly for this reason that our books were integrated into extracurricular programmes.
Consequently, the library at Emirati Jordanian camp has become a social hub for its boys and girls who, excited with the arrival of new book collections, have stated their wish for all-night sit-ins and sleepovers. Further north, at Zaatari, the foundation donated 20 libraries to Blumont in order to help build a respectable collection covering the settlement’s large population. Book clubs, storytelling gatherings, character role plays subsequently became new community repertories here, as they did in other parts of the world receiving donations. Added to this, with the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic and the restrictions on movement, books became a useful aid to while time away for the children to read while in their caravan homes.
As for the Ara programme, in 2018 the foundation undertook a regional survey to gain a firsthand, unique understanding of resources and needs amongst visually disabled child populations. Close to 20,000 youngsters were identified, together with information on age groups, teaching resources, teaching methods, literature available, literature in demand and the capacity to use technology. Such data has provided a privileged view upon which our strategy is based. A partnership agreement with the Accessible Books Consortium on collaboration in accessible publishing in Arabic, followed suit in November 2018 and training provided to regional imprints five months later. In reflection of the advances made by Ara, the programme was shortlisted for the Accessible Books Consortium International Excellence Awards in February 2020 under the initiative category. Furthermore, following the production of 100 books in Arabic using the EPUB3 format in April 2020, the foundation anticipates the online publication of its books on the ABC Global Book Service for worldwide availability.
Leveraging support, COVID-19 and moving forward
Progress has not come without witnessing some of the harsh realities experienced by those that the foundation seeks to serve. A number of youngsters in refugee camps for instance, evidence prodigious talent, redoubled by blazing ambition to do well in life. However, they are greatly limited in their access to material that would help them advance. English literature and grammar, science, astronomy, maths and music being examples. Where the foundation has not been able to offer direct support, it has taken requests and amplified needs to international organisations capable of such supply. In this regard we do our best to extend help within our networks.
Reeling from the effects of the pandemic, 2020 was a hard year, not least for global publishing and those whom Kalimat Foundation works to serve. The ecosystem was thrown into flux defining new considerations and new equilibrium. Books continued to be delivered to the Hekaya Arts literary initiative in Kenya where the schooling system was severely affected, and to Siilaanyo library in Hargeisa in the Somaliland region. Active communication continued with a number of beneficiaries across the globe, whose operations were also badly interrupted.
During lockdown, the foundation’s strategy with Ara, to give every child material in braille, large print and audio worked particularly well with one-on-one reading where parents in some instances used the large print, or listened to audio recordings, while their son or daughter read braille.
Notwithstanding the benefits delivered in print formats; e-books and digital libraries have also become very popular. As such the objective now is to allocate resources to print and digital publishing on an equal split. The new move involves international collaboration, and we expect the best of both worlds.
2021 represents an exciting stage, pushing forward and advancing further in supporting literacy amongst the underserved. Together with the development of accessible digital publishing and distribution via online platforms and traditional formats, the year ahead also represents expansion into Africa and further afield. In this regard, we are delighted to announce partnership with Book Aid International to help cement the effective achievement in our planning and distribution.
Our effort thus continues to leverage a number of global partners in publishing, technology, national and international government, and organisations in the charities segment. Kalimat Foundation’s mission is to serve vulnerable and visually disabled children, to provide them with knowledge and ideas in books, through a number of accessible formats. In this it is believed that the underserved are to find the chance to develop and achieve greater prospects in life, and fittingly, greater reward.
The Kalimat Foundation team