Once upon a library
Children's libraries are carrying out innovative activities to nurture readers for life.


Smitha Verma
September 8, 2019
UPDATED: September 13, 2019 12:12 IST
Once upon a library
Children at the Treasure Trove library in Gurugram.
It's not a dilapidated building where books are gathering dust under the watchful eyes of a stern librarian. Rather, the walls are painted in bright colours, books of various genres vie for attention and the librarian is someone who will not just issue you a book, but would curate the whole experience for you. These are places not run by government bodies or private corporations but in fact passionate book lovers who want children to explore books in an environment that is not just relaxed, but joyful as well.

The curators of these children's libraries are voracious readers. They are working towards fostering reading habit on a 'selfie generation' where many have long lost the love for the written word. These libraries run on donations, some opened using personal savings and some are struggling to register themselves as a not-for-profit organisation. A few offer online services. Some function as part-bookstore and part-event space; organise workshops, dance and music events, storytelling sessions and even film screenings from time to time. But what all of them have in common is a desire to see youngsters among books. And to cater to this need they are putting up several more activities in the library than just exchange of books.



The OneUp Library, for zero to 14-year-olds, is nestled in the plush neighbourhood of Vasant Vihar. The threefloor building is a bookstore and a library, started in 2017, and is proof of the sheer passion that drives Dalbir Kaur Madan in creating a child-friendly reading space. With a collection of 25,000 books, it's not unusual to see a parent read aloud to a child sitting in a corner or another one playing with blocks. It currently has 190 members, with the youngest being five-months old.

For Madan, libraries are the epicentre of learning and a place for new ideas. "Unfortunately, many schools don't pay adequate attention to innovative practices, or to make attempts to initiate kids into the world of books," rues Madan, who first set up the OneUp in Amritsar in 2011. When she moved to Delhi, it came with her.


Madan runs Book Clubs, Read Aloud programmes and an Informal Reading Assessment where the reading instruction is based on the latest research in neuroscience, developmental psychology and reading pedagogy. Members upload videos on YouTube where they talk about a book.

Madan has also started the the Bandana Sen Library Award, dedicated to her mentor, which invites nationwide entries for excellence in best practices in nurturing a learning environment. Running costs are always on the higher end and there are never enough members. "It's my third child, an elephant, who is always hungry," says Madan.

Bookworm's alley

Touted as the first children's library in Gurugram Treasure Trove is indeed a land of treasures for children. When it started in 2009, it was a concept new to people in the neighbourhood. "But I was convinced that it was the need of the hour," says Arvinda Bhatia, founder of Treasure Trove.

It was an idea that was born out of the needs of her voracious reader daughter and the son who loved solving puzzles. "In my search for a library for them, I realised none existed in this part of the city," she says. An engineer by training, she got the initial know-how of how to run a library by taking a franchiseship of children's and toys library in Maharashtra.


"After six months, that company closed but I kept my passion alive." While the initial few years demanded family savings to be pumped in, now Treasure Trove is able to sustain itself with 300 members and 10,000 titles for the 0 to 16 year age group. She conducts regular events where children's writers are invited, Sudoku sessions are popular as are thematic events. Recently, during Ganesh Chaturthi, they held activities around the festival. Her biggest concern remains floating members.

"Reading is the first thing that goes into the backburner," she rues. To keep the momentum, she has started an online library, where books are delivered at readers' doorstep. "My wish is to start Treasure Trove in other cities too. Maybe as franchises."

For the ones neglected

IT'S a children's library with the pure intent of serving the underprivileged. My Perch in Noida is a place where educational games, puzzles, art and craft paraphernalia vie for space with books for children. It is especially for those who are from the deprived background from the nearby Barola village.

"I started it five years back while I was working in a not-for-profit organisation, where I realised the vacuum that existed in their lives. So I left my job, collaborated with NGO and started this place," says 32-year-old Kamiya Dargan. The library has storytelling sessions, computer workshops, vocal music and painting classes every week. With a nominal fee of `50 for a year, children can pick and choose activity of their choice besides books, and at any given day there are around 60 kids who visit the library, which has around 300 members. She runs the library through donations. A big part of My Perch is the workshops for teenagers including mental health and sexuality classes.

Money is always less to meet costs. "Another challenge is to convince parents to send their kids. They feel this is neither a school nor are the kids earning any money from here."

A corner for young minds

Climbing up the stairs of a commercial building in a crowded marketplace, moving a level up from Subway outlet, the last thing you expect to see is a library. But the wafting smells of printed word will charm any reader into this reading nook which houses over 6,000 books ranging from classics to bestsellers and board games.

Usually it's a rare sight to see a librarian in a school to take her passion to home as well. But Suman Batra who works with DPS International School in Gurugram, opened PikkABook so she could extend her passion for reading after coming back from school too. "Children enjoy reading if they are exposed to the right kind of books from a young age," she says, when quizzed are children even reading.

Batra, a former marketing professional, picked up the skills of being a librarian from a school in Thailand where her son was enrolled a few years back. "I used to frequent my son's school library when we were living there. They saw my interest in books and offered me a job. I worked as a librarian there for four years before returning to India in 2014."

PikkaBook, which opened in 2018, runs several events ranging from book clubs, book launches, storytelling, indoor games and now even birthday parties. "It is a new concept which I started where kids in the age group of 4 to 11 can celebrate their birthday at the library. We do activities around books but no food is allowed inside," says Batra, whose library is housed in a busy shopping centre in Sector 56.

She manages to meet the running costs by lending her library premises for workshops and activities related to kids. "This is the only way to earn money for running a set-up such as this. Membership fees don't help in meeting all the needs of this place," says the 41-year-old.