Sponsored by the Associate University Librarian Research & Scholarship and the Hindi-Urdu Language Program
Date: Wednesday, November 8, 2023 Time: 12:30pm to 1:30pm
(Programming: 12:30pm to 1:00pm; Food & Mingling: 1:00pm to 1:30pm)
Location: Asian Centre Auditorium (1871 West Mall) (direction)
Program: Welcome: Iori Khuhro
Land Acknowledgement & Introduction to the Asian Library: Shirin Eshghi Furuzawa
Introduction to the Hind-Urdu Program: Student from the Department of Asian Studies
Presentation on Diwali: Taran Dhillon
Performance: Sargam UBC
Followed by light Indian refreshments.
Diwali or Deepavali, which means “a row of lights”, is the most widely celebrated festival in India and throughout the Indian diaspora. It is celebrated on Amavasya (darkest night or no moon day), it usually takes place at the end of October or the first week of November. Diwali marks the victory of good over evil, and the beginning of the New Year in India. The festival celebration, which typically lasts from five to seven days, is celebrated by several South Asian Communities, and by the majority of Indians regardless of faith, including Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists and Christians. On Diwali, people decorate their houses with diyas, candles as well as colourful lights, and they share gifts and recite prayers.
UBC Asian Library invites students, staff and faculty members to experience the diversity of South Asian culture through music and delicious refreshments.
In addition, the Asian Library will be hosting a book display near the entrance of the Asian Centre from November 1 to 15, featuring our collection related to the festival. Please stop by and take a look!
All Diwali activities are free and no registration is required.
UBC Asian Library is known for its collection of Asian-language scholarly resources to support the research, teaching, and learning activities of scholars, students, and community members at UBC. Have you ever wondered what odd, unique, or wonderful items we have accumulated in the course of building our library collections for over 60 years? We are currently hosting a book exhibit, “Hidden Gems at Asian Library,” to show you some of these unusual and rather special materials usually stored away in our closed stacks.
The exhibit is spread out in two locations: the Asian Centre foyer and inside the Asian Library.
When you enter the Asian Centre, look on your left at the entrance. We have a book display case there showing smaller items of interest, from an otaku figurine to a beautiful replica of a painting depicting Chŏngjo, King of Korea’s visit to Hwasŏng in 1795.
Walk toward the back of the Asian Centre foyer, and you will see a large display case. Here, check out a replica of Hyakumantō Darani (“One Million Pagodas and Dharani Prayers”), Japan’s earliest extant printed material. Can you tell where the printed matter is hidden? There are many other gems displayed in this section, including a Sanskrit bījas and mantras reproduced by the Japanese monk Sō-gen who was active in the 19th century.
Inside the Asian Library, you will find items exhibited on each floor. On the Upper Floor, you will discover the lovely 1894 printed picture book on the Yangtze River Gorges, a set of Tibetan Buddhist text, a mid-20th century boxed set of kanji flash cards, a stunningly beautiful reproduction of Kang Youwei’s own manuscript copy of Da tong shu (“The book of great harmony”), and many others gems. Don’t forget to visit the Lower Floor to see a display of the Korean woodblock printed book, Oryun haengsilto (1859) on Confucian ethics, a replica of the Japanese novelist and poet Miyazawa Kenji’s notebook, and others. Finally, on the Main Floor, we have a display case containing a lovely book of rubbings, Xianxie gong jia zhuan, and others, including Specimen pages of Korean movable types. Collected & described by Melvin P. McGovern. The book is open to a page from the Man’guk Yusa [World History, 1896] in which the “great king of Majedon, Aregisanda” is introduced—Alexander the Great of Macedon.
We are pleased to be able to feature these gems in the display cases throughout the Library and look forward to welcoming you to our space! The exhibit will be on from now until December 9, 2023.
Asian Library is happy to participate in the Science Literacy Week again this year, September 18 to 24! The Science Literacy Week is a Canada-wide annual celebration to highlight the ways to explore and enjoy the diversity of Canadian science. This year’s theme is energy.
Check out the list of great reads in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and South Asian languages on energy, especially in regard to ways we use it as an industrial and household power source. Come and view the book displays on the Upper Floor of our library as well!
We hope you will join us in reading and learning more about energy – how it’s generated, what technologies are used, how we use it daily, and how that impacts the world in which we live.
Recently the Scholarly Communications and Copyright Office released its 2022/2023 Impact and Activity Report, showcasing some of the year’s highlights and accomplishments.