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Tuesday, September 10, 2024

First Lady moves over 66K books from Malacañang to the National Library

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First Lady Liza Araneta-Marcos recently inaugurated a permanent gallery on the second floor of the National Library of the Philippines for over 66,000 books, which she discovered while doing housekeeping at the Malacañan Palace.

Bookworms and academic scholars can now get their hands on cultural books and law books—some of them first edition copies signed by the author—that were kept in storage in Malacañang for years, if not decades.

Araneta-Marcos said the books, many of which had mold due to poor storage, would be put to better use by being accessible to the public.

PRIZED MAP. First Lady Liza Araneta-Marcos poses beside the prized Murillo-Velarde 1734 Map at its permanent home at the National Library of the Philippines. With the First Lady are (from left to right) Cesar Gilbert Q. Adriano, Director IV, National Library of the Philippines; Secretary of Education Juan Edgardo ‘Sonny‘ Angara; AIJC and NOW Chairman Mel V. Velarde; Ms. Vivian F. Salinas; and their son, Victor Chriscien S. Velarde.

“Part of my duties as ‘fierce lady’ is to fix one room a week in Malacañang. We went to a room and it was full of books, cultural books, heritage books, law books. There were 66,000 all in all, some of them were in the floor, some of them are amag (mold) the law books especially were first edition signed by the author themselves,” she said.

Mrs. Marcos thanked the administrators and directors of the National Library for making access to the donated books free of charge.

“Thank you for preserving the works of our national heroes– along with books, maps and memorabilia that have shaped our heritage. The fact that you made this priceless collection accessible to the public free of charge is an achievement in itself,” she said.

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