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For
Pura Belpré Award information, click here.
Biographical
Notes
Pura
Belpré was a talented author and storyteller who wrote and
re-interpreted Puerto Rican folk tales. As the first Puerto Rican
librarian in the New York Public Library system she pioneered the
library's work with the Puerto Rican community.
Belpré
was born in Cidra,
Puerto Rico
. There is a discrepancy in her date of birth, which is variously cited
as
February 2, 1899
,
December 2, 1901
, or
February 2, 1903. She graduated from
Central
High School in Santurce in 1919 and enrolled at the
University
of
Puerto Rico
in Río Piedras. Soon thereafter, in 1920 she interrupted her studies in
order to attend her sister Elisa's wedding in
New York. As it turned out, except for brief interludes, Belpré was to remain
in
New York
for the rest of her life. Like many of the Puerto Rican women who came
to
New York
at that time, Belpré's first job was in the garment industry. Her
Spanish language skills soon earned her a position as Hispanic Assistant
in a branch of the public library at
135th Street
in
Harlem. Belpré became the first Puerto Rican to be hired by the New York
Public Library (NYPL).
It
was while working in the children's division that Belpré discovered her
passion for storytelling, her love for children's literature, and her
interest in librarianship. In 1926 she began her formal studies in the
Library
School
of the New York Public Library. One of the courses that most inspired
her was storyteller Mary Gould Davis' "The Art of
Storytelling." As a course requirement Belpré wrote her first folk
tale using a story she had heard as a child from her grandmother in
Puerto Rico
. This story, Pérez and Martina, a love story between a
cockroach and a mouse, became the first Puerto Rican tale to be shared
with children at a story hour in the public library.
In
1929, due to the increasing numbers of Puerto Ricans settling in
southwest
Harlem
, Belpré was transferred to a branch of the NYPL at
115th Street. She quickly became an active advocate for the Spanish-speaking
community by instituting bilingual story hours, buying Spanish language
books, and implementing programs based on traditional holidays such as
the celebration of Three Kings Day. In her efforts to reach children and
adults, she attended meetings of civic organizations such as the Porto
Rican Brotherhood of America and La Liga Puertorriqueña e Hispana.
Through Belpré's efforts, the
115th Street
branch became an important cultural center for the Latino residents of
New York City. Belpré also worked for a time at the Aguilar branch on
East 110th Street
in
East Harlem
where she initiated similar programs to expand library services to
Puerto Ricans.
In 1940, Belpré was invited to present a paper about her work
with the Spanish-speaking community of
New York City
at the conference of the American Library Association in
Cincinnati, Ohio. While in
Cincinnati, Belpré met her future husband, the African-American composer and
violinist, Clarence Cameron White, who was there conducting the June
Festival of Music. They were married on
December 26, 1943
. Belpré who had been working as a children's librarian decided to take
a leave of absence in 1944 and at the end of the year resigned her
position to go on tour with her husband and to devote herself to
writings. Belpré's first book, Pérez and Martina: a Portorican Folk
Tale had been published by Frederick Warne in 1932. Her second story
"The Three Magi" was published in 1944 as part of the
anthology The Animals' Christmas by Anne Thaxter Eaton. Once she
stopped working in the library, Belpré pursued her literary ambitions
in earnest. During this period she compiled a collection of tales titled
The Tiger and the Rabbit and Other Tales which was, in fact, the
first English collection of Puerto Rican folk tales published in the
United States. Consequently, she became a well-published writer, editor, and
translator. Although, she collected children's tales from many
countries, her primary concern was the preservation and dissemination of
Puerto Rican folklore.
Throughout
their lives together, Belpré and her husband maintained their residency
in
New York's
Harlem. In 1960, White died of cancer and Belpré returned to part-time work
in the library as the Spanish Children's Specialist. She worked all over
the city wherever there were large numbers of Puerto Rican children. In
1968, she retired from this position, but was persuaded to work with the
newly established South Bronx Library Project, a community outreach
program to promote library use and to provide needed services to Latino
neighborhoods throughout the
Bronx
.
In addition to her work in the library and her literary
activities, Belpré participated in numerous cultural and civic
organizations during her lifetime. In 1939, for example, she was a
member of the Association for the Advancement of Puerto Rican People.
She helped establish the Archivo de Documentación Puertorriqueña,
an early effort to collect original Puerto Rican documents, and she
helped develop children's programs at the Museo del Barrio. It
was largely through her efforts that the New York Public Library began
to address the needs of the Spanish speaking community and to acquire
culturally relevant materials.
Pura
Belpré died on
July 1, 1982
leaving a rich literary legacy. Several of her books, long out-of-
print, are finally being re-issued, and giving a new generation of
children the opportunity to enjoy them.
Copyright
© Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños, Hunter College CUNY
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