In 2001, after months of unemployment, I spent eleven months attending the Allen Library FÁS course in North Richmond Street, Dublin, beside Croke Park stadium. To those who don't know, I should explain that FÁS is an Irish government body that provides training for unemployed people. The Allen Library is an archive and "library" (although it is not open to the public) belonging to the Christian Brothers, a religious congregation. The building that housed it had once been a school, and is now home to a community of Christian Brothers.
Unemployed people who attended the Allen Library were given training in library work, many of them (me included) going on to work in libraries.
These eleven months in my life are like a page torn from a book. For a few years after leaving the Allen Library, I did occasionally cross paths with people I had met there. But it's been many years since that happened. I don't know anyone I met in the Allen Library now. I don't have their contact details or know what they are doing today. I never come across any reference to the Allen Library. Apart from my memories, and the goodbye card I was given on my last day, it might never have happened.
During my time in the Allen Library, dozens of trainees passed through its doors. The scheme operated for some years before and also (I imagine) for some years after I attended, although it's finished now. I imagine that some of those people may have browsed the internet for references to their old stomping ground, and found next to nothing. (But why should that matter, anyway, you might ask? It just does, at least to me. I like things to be chronicled and commemorated.) Perhaps some Allen Library "alumni" will be cheered to come across this account.
I started my stint in the Allen Library in the least cheerful circumstances possible. Between attending the interview for the course and receiving the letter telling me I was accepted-- a mere matter of days-- my mother died. This was in January. It was something of a miracle that she actually experienced a final Christmas with us. That makes my memories of starting in the Allen library so much more vivid. It seems like a new epoch in my life.
Despite my mother's death, and despite the fact that I was surrounded by Christian books and materials all day long, I was most definitely non-religious at this time. At the same time, I was taking a keen (but purely intellectual) interest in Judaism and, to a lesser extent, Mormonism.
On an occasion when one of the brothers was giving us a tour of the building, and showing us the upstairs bedroom where the Order's founder Blessed Edmund Rice had slept, he unexpectedly asked us to join him in a prayer. I remember feeling embarrassed and flustered, and annoyed at myself for feeling embarrassed and flustered. Though I was an agnostic, tending towards atheism, I experienced an unpleasant sense of having been conditioned by modern society, when I realized that simply joining in a prayer mortified me.
The Allen Library was hard work. The course did give us skills, and it did lead to employment in my case and in many others, but it definitely got something back from the trainees. We did a lot of cataloguing of books and archival material (writing in pencil on index cards), as well as data entry of the records into a computer database. I found it quite gruelling a lot of the time. Worst of all was the "checking", a regular stint of going through index cards that other people had written up, and checking their accuracy.
It wasn't all hard work though. One practice that the tutors in the Allen Library instituted was to have "reading time" every Wednesday afternoon, for the last hour and a half or so of the day. The reasoning was that there was no point in being surrounded by books if you never got to read them. I thought (and think) that this was wonderfully civilized. I think every employer on Earth should have "reading time"!
I came across some other good stuff in the archive boxes. There were hundreds and hundreds of these boxes and it was a genuine lucky dip as to what you found. Probably the most remarkable thing that I discovered was a withered stalk in an envelope, which was all that was left of a flower that the Irish nationalist Erskine Childers had given to a female friend before he was executed. I put it in a little plastic wallet, and felt proud to have played a part in its history. There were also letters written by Irish nationalists before execution, letters from other Irish nationalists written from prison, and a psaltery that belonged to Daniel O'Connell, one of the most prominent figures in Irish history, and the man after whom Dublin's main street is named.
Smell is the royal road of memory. When I remember those archive boxes, I remember the smell that is probably most redolent of my whole time in the Allen Library-- the smell of the latex gloves that we had to wear while handling them, and of the powder with which the gloves were lined. I remember, too, the way the scent would cling to your hands afterwards, even after you had washed them. It was a pungent but not unpleasant smell.
As well as reading time, we also had regular parties, lunches and field trips. Every time somebody celebrated an important birthday, or got a job, or was leaving for some other reason, we seemed to have a celebration. We would run tables together in the main workroom, which had a mural of Da Vinci's Last Supper on one wall. (Everybody agreed that it was an awful mural, though I didn't see much wrong with it.) These feasts would often go on for a couple of hours. Usually, some of the Christian Brothers would join us; one of them was quite an accomplished raconteur.
One memory that always lingers in my mind is when the woman who ran the project said, "We eat together more than most families, at this stage." This is a poignant memory for two reasons; one, because it is sadly true, since so many families do not eat together (my own rarely did); and two, because the "we" of that sentence no longer exists, even in the most residual way.
On a dark note, I was in the Allen Library when I first heard of the 9/11 attacks. I was entering the data on the pencilled index cards onto our computer system. Someone came in to announce that a plane had flown into the World Trade Centre in New York, and soon a television set had been set up and everybody was gathered around it. Everybody except me, that is. Partly through shyness, partly through contrarianism, I kept working through the whole thing.
I remember the moment that one of the Christian Brothers came in to announce that the second tower had been hit. I remember the exact phrase he used, half-wonderingly and half-ironically: "The end of the world!". I was frightened, and frightened of showing that I was frightened, though I'm not sure what I was frightened of exactly. Who knew what else might happen? People were making phone calls to loved ones in America to make sure they were unharmed. Someone said something about the European Parliament being targeted.
I think we all remember the emotions of the days following 9/11, and I won't try to evoke them again here. But something that one of my fellow trainees said, either the next day or a few days later, did stick in my mind. He said that he had gone to Mass, even though he was not a believer, because he felt he had to do something. It is extraordinarily interesting that God and religion seem to be indispensable in times of stark tragedy. Of course, it doesn't prove anything. But it suggests quite a lot.
And now all the tea-things of the Allen Library heritage project have been washed for the last time, and there are no more celebratory lunches, and all the routines and sights and sounds and smells of its daily life survive only in the archive boxes of memory. I don't know if any of the trainees I knew kept in touch with each other. Nothing in my life now harks back to that eleven months I spent there.
There is a strange and unique poignancy to closed shops, and defunct businesses, and offices that have been shut down. Families pass away, but that is a tragedy and acknowledged as such. They are remembered by their descendants, and usually live in family folklore. Political parties and sporting clubs and entire nations break up-- but people write books and articles about that. But what happens to the life spirit of newsagents and tenant's associations and training courses, when their day is done? Who laments them?
But who knows? Perhaps someone else who passed through the doors of the Allen Library, in this period of its life, will come on this post and feel some glow of nostalgia, or of fellowship. I hope so. In any case, I keep them all in my prayers.
Lovely post M ... I hope some of your Allen Library Alumni find it and make contact ... it's certainly nice to think that someone might ...
ReplyDeleteI hope so, too. And by the way, Father, I am keeping your own situation in my prayers every day. Thanks for your kind words.
ReplyDeleteAnother fine piece of writing and thinking. Thanks as ever.
ReplyDeleteThank you, sir!
ReplyDeleteThanks for you blog post! I am a very brief Allen Library alum, although I think from quite a few years after you had been there. It's nice to see it acknowledged. I think it is(was?) one of the only places to get any kind of qualifiction in library/archival studies, apart from the Masters.
ReplyDeleteYaayyy! I wrote this post mostly hoping that people like yourself would come across it. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteM, most enjoyable read which I came across by accident. Having been involved right at the start in setting up and putting the Allen Library Project together way back in the mid 90s it is great to read a post like this one concerning the Library. Memories...Indexation, checking, wash up rota - did they tea trolley still exist ?. One of the elderly Brothers there during my time commented that he always got 'great satisfaction from how the project was a benefit to people' and that in itself made it worthwhile..
ReplyDeleteYou are one of the pioneers! Yes, it seemed to me a great shame that there was nothing written about the Allen Library project on the internet, that I could see. I know there is a pamphlet that was published by the Project...though I admit I never read it. I am always more interested in the anecdotal side of things, rather than the more business-like aspect. I think they had the tea-trolley though I don't remember clearly.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your amazing blog on Allen library! I share the same sentiments. I missed the place.
ReplyDeleteIola
Thanks Lola! I'm sorry I nevermind replied to this.
DeleteHi I used to work there 90s , cataloguing books . It was through FAS if anyone else did this be great to hear from you
DeleteHello,
DeleteI used to work there, too, cataloguing books, pamphlets etc. We found a pope's shoes, a lot of letters and precious maps.
I enjoyed the work.
I really missed it.
Iolanda
Hi Iolanda
DeleteThat's interesting to hear! Pope's shoes, I never heard about that one. I love hearing from people who were in the Allen Library.
I hope you're doing well now.
Maolsheachlann
Worked there as a fás trainee in the late 90's for a year I think. Met the best of people & had the best time. I had a brutal time keeping if I remember but the people who ran it were so kind. Beautiful building & was one of favourite jobs I had.
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear from you, unknown. Yes, the building was lovely. And they were very tolerant! At one point I got browned off and read a book for a few days and nobody bothered me!
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