Despite
Financial Crisis, Buenos Aires Attracts 3,000 to
IFLA Conference
Argentine
novelist Tomás Eloy Martínez, currently director of Latin American
studies at
Rutgers
University
in
New Jersey
, keynoted the conference at the historic
Colón Theater with a stirring paean to books and libraries. “During my
adolescence,” he said, “librarians seemed to me extensions of God,
heirs of an inexhaustible knowledge.” IFLA President Kay Raseroka of
Botswana
struggled through her opening speech as
the theater’s sound system repeatedly failed. Finally, she quipped,
“For those of you in the
First World
, this is a shock, but in the
Third World
, this is what we live with and accept.”
However, the bulk of the conference took place at the city’s new Hilton
Hotel, which provided efficient facilities for meetings with simultaneous
translation and exhibition space for some 120 publishers, associations,
and other vendors.
Conference
organizers Marta Díaz and Ana María Peruchena Zimmermann explained that
the poor economic situation and the devaluation of the peso forced the
local committee to take out loans and receive assistance from other
national associations in order to meet financial obligations. IFLA
headquarters staff said that the day before the opening session, Colón
Theater workers demanded more money, and negotiations that went on through
the night were at least partially responsible for the equipment breakdown,
late start, and disorganized crowd control.

Nevertheless,
the conference offered delegates ample tastes of the rich culture of
Argentina
, including library tours and a program at
the Opera Theater featuring the Nehuen folk ballet, the Página Mágica
avant-garde circus, the Página choir, and a demonstration of the tango.
Some 300 Americans attended the conference, delivering papers and
participating in the over 200 programs, committee meetings, and working
sessions offered at IFLA 2004, the first federation annual conference ever
held in South America.
A
full report on the conference is scheduled for the October issue of
American Libraries.
Hector Marino
REFORMA International Relations Committee
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