Mine would not have been the only blood to run cold when videos of students escaping with little more than their lives popped up on screen.
‘The students are safe’, was a comforting recurrent message. Good.
Still, the flames looked too close to the library for comfort. Spare African Studies and Special Collections, at least, my heart pleaded.
The narrow staircase and eerie cavern at its end provided a most unlikely sense of warmth to students who, like me, sought references and stillness found nowhere else in the southern hemisphere’s biggest library.
It was a refuge for seekers of rare insight, a DeLorean for those craving a glimpse of bygone eras.
The librarians of African Studies, Special Collections and Government Publications (I have yet to grow accustomed to the ‘Jagger Reading Room’ moniker’) deserve much credit for enriching so much of my work as a student and as a writer in the UCT Newsroom.
As an Orientation Leader, it was also the place where the new first-years’ eyes would light up the most – “did you say, ‘world’s smallest Bible’?”
To phrase this in the past tense hurts. The true scale of its loss will be processed in pieces; its absence will flare up in moments where, before Sunday’s inferno, it would have marched alongside me on my quest for the day.
A goodbye and thank you to that chamber of treasures would have been fitting.
Temporality, you merciless beast.
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The Centre for Curating the Archive, in association with Michaelis Galleries (UCT) and UCT Libraries will stage a memorial exhibition marking the one-year anniversary of the tragic Jagger Library fire at the Michaelis Galleries. The exhibition will open to the public on Wednesday, 20 April 2022.
In an email to UCT students, Vice-Chancellor Professor Mamokgethi Phakeng said:
“Thank you for your patience as we seek ways to return to full academic activity at the University of Cape Town under COVID-19 regulations. Our first priority is to ensure the health and safety of everyone who needs to return to campus buildings.”
UCT is deeply grateful to all the donors who supplied food and other essential items for our students, and to everyone who has so generously offered other forms of support and assistance.
Everyone who would like to support the #UCTFire emergency relief fund is urged to please make financial donations to UCT through the UCT Alumni Ways to Give web page.
Donations can also be made by EFT using the details below:
Account name: UCT Donations Account
Bank: Standard Bank of South Africa
Branch code: Rondebosch Branch, 025009
Account number: 07 152 2387
Swift code: SBZAZAJJ
Please include your donor name if you so wish, as well as the reference for your donation, e.g. Name Surname, #UCTFire.