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Lord of the Books creates novel way to promote peace

(China Daily) Updated: 2017-06-07 07:36

BOGOTA - Emptying the bins of Colombia's capital, Jose Alberto Gutierrez one day found a copy of the classic novel Anna Karenina and kept it.

That was 20 years ago - and the garbage man continued to collect Bogota's discarded books, amassing 25,000 in a free library, swelled by donations.

"I realized that people were throwing books away in the rubbish. I started to rescue them," said Gutierrez.

The 54-year-old never got past primary school as a student, but is now dubbed "The Lord of the Books", in demand from schools across the country.

That first copy of Tolstoy was soon joined by The Little Prince, Sophie's World, The Iliad and novels by Colombian master Gabriel Garcia Marquez.

Gutierrez's neighbors started coming round to borrow books to help their children with schoolwork.

"There was a lack of them in our neighborhood, so we started to help."

Now a whole floor of his house, on a hill in the working class Nueva Gloria district of the capital, is taken up by stacks of books.

Along with wife Luz Mery Gutierrez and their three children, Gutierrez opened it as a free library in 2000.

Volunteers joined in, word spread and Gutierrez found himself invited to international book fairs in Santiago and Monterrey as well as in the capital.

Where once he supplied the library by rescuing books from the street, now most of his stock comes from donations. Gutierrez covers any further expenses from his own pocket.

"We have a blessed curse upon us," he said. "The more books we give away, the more come to us."

The collection got so big that they had to halt the children's reading sessions they held in the house, for lack of space.

Instead, Gutierrez started traveling around the country to deliver free books to hundreds of poor and remote districts.

Gutierrez says his mother gave him a love of literature by reading cartoons to him in the country shack where he grew up.

"It was she who enlightened me," he says.

Having not finished school as a boy, he is now, well into middle age, studying for his school leaver's exam.

Among the people across the vast jungle nation who have contacted him to ask for books was a fighter in the FARC rebel group.

"Books transformed me, so I think books are a symbol of hope for those places," Gutierrez said. "They are a symbol of peace."

Agence France-presse

Lord of the Books creates novel way to promote peace

Jose Alberto Gutierrez checks books stacked in his library on the first floor of his house in Bogota, Colombia.Guillermo Legaria / Agence Francepresse

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