Latest Activity

Debprasad Dutta is attending RAMESH's event
Sunday
Sumedha Singh updated their profile
Friday
Azmit Begum Chowdhary replied to Pushpanjali Shriram Patil's discussion Call for Book Chapters – Volume 6 (2026) Emerging Perspectives in Library and Information Science: Digital Libraries and Knowledge Management
Friday
Yogesh Modi updated their profile
Dec 18
Dr.Anil Duboliya posted a status
"Adoption and Utilization of Digital Repositories in Medical College Libraries: An Empirical Study"
Dec 16
Mr REYAZ AHMAD KHAN is attending Dr.K.S.SHIVRAJ's event

A One-day National Workshop on Smart Citations Using Scite.ai at Online

December 17, 2025 from 11:30am to 12:30pm
Dec 16
Dr.K.S.SHIVRAJ posted an event

A One-day National Workshop on Smart Citations Using Scite.ai at Online

December 17, 2025 from 11:30am to 12:30pm
Dec 15
melvin jebaraj posted an event
Dec 15
Somaraya B Tallolli posted an event
Thumbnail

VTU National Conference on Engineering Librarianship (VTUNCEL 2025) at Visvesvaraya Technlogical University

January 22, 2026 to January 24, 2026
Dec 15
BANDI YUGANDHAR posted an event
Dec 15
Dr. Shamim Aktar Munshi posted an event
Dec 15
RAMESH posted an event

ICSSR Sponsored Two Days National Seminar on Role of University Libraries towards Realizing Viksit Bharat @ 2047 (RULVB@2047)’ at Dept. of Library and Information Science & Central Library Dravidian University, Kuppam, Andhra Pradesh

January 23, 2026 at 9am to January 24, 2026 at 5pm
Dec 15
Anil Kumar Gupta is now a member of LIS Links
Dec 15
Samidha Sandeep Yadav updated their profile
Dec 14
Sajad Ahmad Kumar updated their profile
Dec 13
SANJEET SEHRAWAT might attend Dr. Ashis Biswas's event
Dec 12
Sunny Sharma updated their profile
Dec 12
Sunny Sharma left a comment for lata sharma
Dec 12
Parthasarathivamanan.K commented on Parthasarathivamanan.K's event 'International Conference on Transforming Libraries: Innovation, Management, Smart Technologies and Creative Knowledge of Society for the Future'
Dec 11
Parthasarathivamanan.K commented on Parthasarathivamanan.K's event 'International Conference on Transforming Libraries: Innovation, Management, Smart Technologies and Creative Knowledge of Society for the Future'
Dec 11

Dear all,

During one of my browsing sessions for some information, I came across an interesting piece of information which I feel would interest several fellow professionals as well. ย This is from the National Daily -"The Hindu" dated 4th December 2013

____________________________________________________________________________________

In these days of shrinking shelf space, Shabir Musthafaโ€™s e-library of books in regional languages, Mera Library, has set the trend.

Reams of poignant prose have been written of libraries. Doris Lessing called it the โ€œmost democratic thing in the worldโ€; Albert Einstein said, โ€œThe only thing that you absolutely have to know, is the location of the libraryโ€; and T.S. Eliot wrote that the โ€œvery existence of libraries affords the best evidence that we may yet have hope for the future of manโ€. However, with rising economic and environmental costs of paper, a bookless world in our imminent future is quite believable. Hope still arises though in the realm of e-books. And an e-book library of works in Indian languages, named Mera Library, is what founder Shabir Musthafa has set his store by.

Acquiring books

Mera Library is home to over 4,000 books in eight Indian languages besides English, written by 2,000 authors through 250 publications. Officially launched in 2011, Shabir says this labour of love has harboured in thought from 2009. As an employee of a large electronic publishing company in Bangalore, Shabir observed that few smaller publishers, especially those in theย bhashaย (vernacular) languages, put out e-book versions of their publications. And for those who did, avenues for display and distribution were rare. โ€œSo I quit my job, took a year off to research the concept and slowly approached publishers, initially asking them for their backlists because I didnโ€™t think they would give their new works to a start-up.โ€

With Mera Library, publishers enter into a non-exclusive partnership where earnings on books given are split 50 per cent between the two. Scouting for books has been an eye-opening experience says Shabir. They began with acquiring works that had outgrown their copyrights. The Gutenberg project was a huge resource for English books. โ€œOur focus though, was to acquire the classics in regional languages, such as Kumaran Asan's works, which are difficult to find even in print today.โ€ A daunting task with old works is preserving their frail bodies while converting to e-books. โ€œI remember the entire Boban and Molly cartoon series by V.T. Thomas was almost crumbling in our hands.โ€ Besides publishers, the team has also approached independent authors for their works. For instance, in Kerala, late Ponjikara Rafiโ€™s family gave the e-library his entire works at once, as did Pratham Books with their extensive children's collection.

Mera Library now possesses over 40,000 works, which will be made available online in phases. โ€œThe process of creating this library has been rather manual,โ€ says Shabir. โ€œBesides converting the books to e-publishing formats, we also encrypt each page of the book since publishers fear subscribers could pirate their books.โ€

Today, Mera Library is manned by seven โ€œcontent and acquisitionโ€ editors who spread their time between Kochi, at Shabirโ€™s home-office in Kakkanad, and Bangalore. Since the e-library, thus far, showcases books in Malayalam, Kannada, Telugu, Marathi, Tamil, Hindi, Urdu and Gujarati, each editor handles one main language and approaches publishers in that sphere for books. โ€œWe follow the long-tail business philosophy where we believe every product will have a reader. Since we also donโ€™t face a shelf-space problem in the virtual world, we donโ€™t curate the library according to our preferences.โ€ The team is now also generating e-readers for right-to-left languages such as Hebrew and Arabic, besides including more languages especially from the North-East, and from nations such as Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam.

Of all the genres the e-library catalogues, Shabir says traffic has been most in their young-adult and religious reading sections. They have also enjoyed audiences from over 18 countries with the UAE scoring highest among them. Subscribers can access the e-library with an internet connection on a computer or on their Android or Apple devices. โ€œE-literacy is growing at an immense pace, and however attached one may be to physical books, we have to acknowledge that theyโ€™re dead trees.โ€ Since thatโ€™s a luxury we can ill-afford in the long term, Mera Library works to make the online reading experience as similar to the offline one. โ€œReaders can bookmark their books, and even make personal notes on the side.โ€

What Shabir hopes for though, is to someday make his e-library available to less-privileged educational institutions. That way theyโ€™re saved the trouble and expense of curating a library of their own, and can instead plug into this ready-made digital resource. For now, Shabir looks to create a community of readers on Mera Library, those that grow together through books, in true spirit with what author Ray Bradbury said, โ€œLibraries raised me.โ€

Views: 358

Reply to This

ยฉ 2025   Created by Dr. Badan Barman.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

LIS Links whatsApp