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Arabic
Texts May Aid in Fighting Disease
Excerpt
By
Carl Hartman, AP
WASHINGTON - As many as 5 million
ancient and recent manuscripts may lie unexplored in West African
private libraries and hidden underground, and some may provide
clues to diseases that have spread from the continent, the Librarian
of Congress says.
"I'd bet there's material in those
African manuscripts about disease we've never even heard of,"
James H. Billington said in an interview, recalling that in medieval
times Arabic medicine was far ahead of European practices. HIV,
ebola and other diseases originated in African areas whose history
is still to be explored
The library on Tuesday opened an
exhibit called "Ancient Manuscripts from the Desert Libraries
of Timbuktu," now a small trading town at the edge of the Sahara
in Mali. The show is being held in cooperation with the Smithsonian
Institution, which on Wednesday opened its annual Folklife Festival
on the National Mall, featuring Mali and other areas.
The manuscripts range from Koranic
teachings to mathematics, physics, medicine and astronomy, according
to library researchers. Most are privately held, often by descendants
of the original owners.
There may be a million such manuscripts
in the 22 private libraries of Timbuktu, said Abdelkader Haidara,
executive director of the city's Mamma Haidara Commemorative Library.
He added that in the rest of Mali and neighboring countries
Mauritania, Niger, Burkina Faso there may be 100 libraries
with 5 million manuscripts, from antiquity to the 1800s.
Haidara said owners of the libraries
are secretive and some buried their manuscript treasures to protect
them from wars in the region before European colonial powers arrived.
Mahmoud Zouber, counselor on Islamic
affairs to President Amadou Toure of Mali, told of trying for
five years to get one proprietor to open his library to inspection.
"One day he finally took me by
the hand," Zouber said, "and led me through two doors to where
I could see boxes of manuscripts. `Come back in a week,' he told
me.
"When I came back, there was no
door. It had been walled up."
Reference
Source 102
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