Lincoln Christian University Donates 30,000 Books to Ukrainian College:
Books Will Replace Ukrainian Library Destroyed by Russian Army
 

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[April 07, 2024]    What does it take to transport a library between continents?

Extensive logistical planning, a call for volunteers, a pallet jack, and exactly 781 boxes. The last week of March nearly 100 volunteers aided staff of Lincoln Christian University's Jessie C. Eury Library in carting, scanning, and packing 30,000 volumes to be shipped to Taviriski Christian Institute in Ukraine.

Volunteers, many working multiple shifts, carried books from shelves, sorted books by size for ease of packing, scanned them into the computer system, and then packed them tightly into boxes.

Labels listing every book in each box were printed and taped to the outside of the corresponding box for customs inspection. Boxes were then stacked onto pallets six layers high and wrapped tightly in plastic to await transfer into a shipping container.

After three days of packing, the 781st and final box was taped shut, and loaded pallets lined the wall from one end of LCU’s Administration Building to the other.

The pallets were then loaded into a shipping container brought to campus at the end of the week.

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As the loading neared its completion, a short prayer service was held at the shipping container.

Current and former faculty and staff, alumni, church youth groups, families with children on spring break, and other volunteers from area churches came to the LCU campus to help with all stages of the packing process.

Tavriski Christian Institute

The books are being shipped to Tavriski Christian Institute (TCI), originally located in Kherson, Ukraine, but currently operating from rented facilities in the eastern city of Ivano-Frankivsk after evacuating at the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February of 2022. When the Russian army invaded, Russian soldiers occupied TCI’s Kherson campus. According to a representative from TCI who came to Lincoln from Ukraine to assist with the transfer, Russian soldiers dragged the TCI library's books outside and threw them into piles, burned them, and then drove over the piles with bulldozers.

TCI, founded in 1997, has been engaged in humanitarian work from the beginning of the war and plans to relocate to a new campus in Kyiv when funding allows. TCI is the only State-licensed Bible College in Ukraine and is in the process of becoming the first and only State-licensed Christian University in Ukraine. The donation from LCU will make up the majority of what is needed to not only rebuild their library, but to also meet the Ukrainian requirements for TCI to be recognized as the first Ukrainian Christian University.

Facilitating the transfer of books at LCU were representatives from Theological Books Network (TBN) based in Grand Rapids, Michigan. This organization works to connect books that need a new home with organizations that need books. The TBN website explains that the centers of Christianity are and have shifted from the historically Christian northern hemisphere to the “Global South,” however many of these areas lack affordable resources for theological university programs, pastoral training, and biblical scholarship. To address this issue, TBN collects books from publishers, seminaries, scholars, churches, and other non-profits and ships them to areas of known need, as well as providing digital resources and supporting indigenous scholarship.

LCU Director of Library Services Leslie Starasta knew of TBN previously and had toured their warehouse in Grand Rapids several years ago. She stated, “I’m so excited our books are able to train Kingdom leaders in a place that’s under-resourced. They are going to make a difference.”

The LCU Library

The 80-year history of Lincoln Christian University’s Jessie C. Eury Library began with a donation of 500 books at the college's founding in 1944 and grew to over 100,000 books, journals, recordings, and special collections. Many of these library resources have been or are in process of being relocated to other schools, in addition to TCI.

Several thousand volumes have gone to Ozark Christian College (Joplin, Missouri), which will be taking over some of Lincoln Christian Seminary’s programming in the fall of 2024. The Enos E. Dowling Rare Book Collection will be relocated to Abilene Christian University’s Special Collections and Archives (Abilene, Texas). The Dowling Collection, named for professor and founding dean of Lincoln Christian Seminary, contains over 1,000 rare books and journals of the Stone-Campbell Movement, and Dowling’s personal collection of Stone-Campbell hymnals. Archives such as LCU yearbooks, catalogs, and commencement programs will also be transferred to Ozark Christian College and Abilene Christian University. Digitized recordings of LCU chapel sermons, conferences, and seminars will be hosted by Ozark Christian College where they will remain available to the public. Theses and Doctor of Ministry projects completed by Lincoln Christian Seminary graduates will continue to be available for interlibrary loan after transfer to Ozark Christian College and Johnson University (Knoxville, Tennessee).

Reflections on a Library

Anyone who attended college on a small campus knows that a university library is more than just a collection of books and journals. It's a quiet place to finish homework and a meeting space for group projects. It’s coveted student worker employment. It's study dates that lead to real dates. It’s help with a procrastinated research project. It’s “study breaks” that might be code for kissing your sweetie in the deserted stacks of the top floor.

It’s a college student worker who is surprised after turning off the lights for the night by a new Seminary student staggering down the stairs in the dark because he didn’t know the library was closing. It’s the same befuddled Seminary student who turns out to not mind staggering down library stairs in the dark so much because now he has an “in” to talk to the student worker at the front desk, who happens to be the prettiest girl on campus. It’s the meet-cute that leads to a courtship between the library student worker and the new Seminary student and ultimately to their wedding three years later. It’s the years later when the couple, now with a daughter and a son, return so that the former Seminary student can become the Seminary professor. It’s their children who grow up to study in the same library while attending the same college as the parents, and the daughter also returning to teach and assigning library research projects to a new generation of students. It’s thinking about legacy and beginnings and endings and grief as a grown-up daughter packs boxes of library books to send to Ukraine in the room where her parents met and then sits down to write the library’s eulogy to submit to Lincoln Daily News.

Lincoln Christian University will host its final commencement ceremony on May 4 at 10:00 a.m. at the former Earl C. Hargrove Chapel. LCU will close permanently on May 31, 2024.

[Stephanie Hall]

 

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