We are made wise not by the recollection of our past, but by the responsibility for our future. - George Bernard Shaw

14 August 2008

LAC uncovers document more precious than gold!

I'm glad the Olympics are over. I was sick of hearing about how poorly Canadian athletes were fairing and I was/am sick of hearing how the Canadian government should give more money to sports and Olympic aspiring athletes.

Don't get me wrong, I like sports and I like the way Canadians rally behind our athletes during the Olympics. The games definitely inspire a sense of togetherness and Canadiana. But I'm not so sure that athletes, people who eat, sleep, train, and breathe their respective sports, deserve more money than other culturally inspiring or important jobs or activities. I would venture to say that waste collectors, city gardeners, librarians, and clinics are more deserving of funding than athletes.

Just before the Olympics occupied every waking moment of CBC's news coverage, Library and Archives Canada was briefly in the news too (really briefly, the story won't take you more than 20 seconds to read). Sometime last year, a LAC employee, who has unnecessarily remained anonymous, accidentally discovered an Australian playbill among Canadian documents. The playbill, possibly the earliest printed document in Australia, dates to 1796 and has been an important item in strengthening the relationship between LAC and the National Archives of Australia.

The lack of coverage this story received is really unfortunate. The story was passed over by the Canadian media in favour of Michael Phelps's eating routine, a report that is hardly worth your time.

While the playbill is ultimately Australian, it is interesting to follow the document's path to Canada where it was safely stored for almost 100 years. If nothing else, the LAC-NAA playbill situation serves to connect Canadian-Australian cultural relations and it should have received more coverage than it did. Archives and museums can encourage a sense of Canadiana and togetherness just as sports can, and probably even more so.

The Olympics come every two years, but archives are forever!