May 23, 2013 | 10:53 PM (BD Time)
23 May, 2013 Thursday
Breaking News:
Bringing knowledge to life
CU Library
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Campus Life Report:
Chittagong University Library is one of the richest libraries in the country with a huge collection of rare books, journals, audio-visual materials, manuscripts and Braille books for disable students.
The library started its journey in November 1996, with the inauguration of the university, with limited staff and only 300 volumes of books at a temporary building. Md. Ataur Rahman was the first assistant librarian. Shamsul Alam, first librarian, and 20 staff were appointed on October 16, 1968.
The library was shifted to the present administrative building in 1973 and its own building in November, 1990. It has now 2,72,818 books 31,470 journals, 2,157 rare books, 565 manuscripts and 200 Braille books.
The three storied building has separate reading rooms for the researchers, teachers and students of different faculties and institutes.
There is an administration section, office of the librarian, processing section, binding section and arts reading room on the ground floor. Science reading room, BBA, Law, and Social Science reading room, manuscripts and rare books section are on the first floor and reference section, periodical section and research room are on the mezzanine floor.
There are 24 rooms for individual study and research for M Phil and Phd students in the library.
The library remains open from 08:00 am to 08:00 pm in the working days. A total 0f 66 staff and officials run the library. Most of the 20,000 students use the library as buying of all books is not possible for them. Around 400 to 500 students use the library daily.
There is also an auditorium in the library for holding cultural programmes, meeting, seminar and symposium. The library is providing the students and researchers with the latest information through Internet services that encourage the students and teachers to increase their reading habit. Researchers from home and abroad also use the library.
The photocopy section provides the service of photocopy at lower cost to the students as they are not allowed to take books outside the library.
There are rare collections of manuscripts in Bangla, Sanskrit, Arabic, Persian and Urdu written during the period from 1872 to 1953.
Besides, there are around 2,157 old and rare books of Bangla, Persian, Urdu, French, Russian and Arabic languages. Apart from these, there are around 1,200 audio-visual materials.
In the rare and old book sections, there are around 4,000 old magazines including Onusandhan, Prabaha, Purbavash, Praci, Sourav, Al Islam, Arya Darshan, Bulbul, Nabya Bharat, Dilruba and Protiva.
Abdul Karim Sahitya Bisharod collected these magazines during the period from 1878 to 1953. After his death, his nephew Dr Ahmed Sharif presented these collections to the CU library. Almost all the national and local dailies are found in the library.
A.K. M. Shariful Islam, a student of Communication & Journalism, said, "I think CU library is one of the largest and richest libraries in our country and it is bringing knowledge to life. It is widely felt that the CU authorities should modernize the library so that each and every users feel a homely, environment there.