Home 5 Articles and Reports 5 Sharjah Children’s Reading Festival – Are our Children Reading for Reading’s Sake?

Sharjah Children’s Reading Festival – Are our Children Reading for Reading’s Sake?

by | Apr 28, 2017 | Articles and Reports

Sharjah Children’s Reading Festival – Are our Children Reading for Reading’s Sake?

An interactive session at the Sharjah Children’s Reading Festival (SCRF), entitled ‘A Lifetime Reading Habit: How to Create a Reading Habit in Young Children’, has heard that fostering a love of reading in children and young adults must be through inspiration rather than education.

Zakaria Ahmed, Educational and Cultural Consultant at Al Yaqadha Arab Library for Women and Children in Ras Al Khaimah emphasised the pivotal role of families and cultural organisations, stressing that today’s readers are tomorrow’s leaders.

He told the audience that many countries such as the USA, Japan and several European nations have realised that encouraging children to read by simply highlighting its ‘importance’ is no longer enough to create lifetime readers.

“The rapid pace of development in all walks of life requires new methodologies to boost reading and promote culture. We should not link all reading to acquiring knowledge nor to any other goal. We should help our children to understand that reading is as much a journey as it is a destination. If we do not, reading will lose its meaning and significance – even if it achieves its objectives,” he said.

Zakaria Ahmed explored key Arab and international reading projects, which aim to encourage children and adults to read. He acknowledged the ‘Arab Reading Challenge’, launched by His Highness Sheikh Mohammad bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai. He also commended the Knowledge without Borders (KwB) ‘Home Library’ project, a Sharjah-based cultural campaign, providing each Emirati household in Sharjah with 50 scientific and literary books.

He also drew attention to the ‘Family Library Project’ in Egypt, and the ‘Jordanian Family Library’ project within the Middle East. Internationally, he underlined the ‘Delicious Books Edible Book Contest’, held in Europe each year, in which children have to create an edible book title or design through meals or cakes and the ‘1.000 Books before Kindergarten’ competition, which is organised in Japan as well as a number of European countries.

Recent News

20May
Historic Auction of Shakespeare Folios

Historic Auction of Shakespeare Folios

A set of the first four editions of William Shakespeare’s collected works is expected to sell for up to £4.5 million ($6 million) at auction this month. Sotheby’s auction house said the May 23 sale will be the first time since 1989 that a set of the First, Second, Third and Fourth Folios has been […]

15May
Ishiguro Joins AI Copyright Appeal

Ishiguro Joins AI Copyright Appeal

  Authors including the Nobel Prize-winner Kasho Ishiguro and publishers including Joanna Prior, CEO of Pan Macmillan have signed an open letter urging UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to enforce copyright law and not let the giant tech companies ‘steal’ authors’ work to train AI models.   The letter reads: “We will lose an immense […]

15May
Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library organised a symposium exploring the often-overlooked contributions of women to the genre of travel literature. Bringing together leading researchers and academics, the event examined how female travellers from the 19th and early 20th centuries used travel—and the literature it inspired—as a means of personal empowerment, self-discovery and the reimagining of prevailing social […]

Related Posts

How Gibran Gave the East a Voice from the Heart of New York

How Gibran Gave the East a Voice from the Heart of New York

On April 10, 1931, Gibran Khalil Gibran passed away at the age of 48. Though his life was brief, his literary and philosophical impact continues to echo across cultures. Widely recognized in the Arab world as a pioneer of the Mahjar literary movement, Gibran’s legacy...

Women in Virginia Woolf’s Literature: A Journey of Self-Discovery

Women in Virginia Woolf’s Literature: A Journey of Self-Discovery

English writer Virginia Woolf is one of the most prominent modernist authors of the twentieth century. Her works are distinguished by their experimental style and their bold, profound exploration of women's issues. In her seminal essay A Room of One’s Own, Woolf...

Previous Next
Close
Test Caption
Test Description goes like this

Pin It on Pinterest

Nasher News
Historic Auction of Shakespeare Folios
Ishiguro Joins AI Copyright Appeal
Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective
How Gibran Gave the East a Voice from the Heart of New York
Haruki Murakami Named Cultural Personality of the Year by the Sheikh Zayed Book Award
Women in Virginia Woolf’s Literature: A Journey of Self-Discovery