'Thank you, volunteers!' Charlotte Mecklenburg Library celebrates National Volunteer Week April 18-24
April 8, 2021
National Volunteer Week (NVW) recognizes ordinary people who improve our neighborhoods and our community every day – volunteers. At the Library, we celebrate the enormous contributions of volunteers April 18-24, 2021 – which is fittingly also National Library Week.
Although the COVID-19 pandemic has prevented us from working closely with volunteers this year, we look forward to seeing and working with them again as soon as it is safe to do so. Still, we celebrate our volunteers who continue to support the Library as customers, advocates and by providing virtual service hours through online programs such as Paws to Read.
Volunteers are an essential part of the Library’s efforts to create a more educated and literate community. Last year, 1,241 volunteers donated 38,496 hours of service to our Libraries. We couldn’t be more grateful!
Charlotte Mecklenburg Library thanks all our volunteers for their dedication and support. We are grateful for the energy and enthusiasm they bring to so many roles: Reading Buddies, Technology Tutors, Circulation Helpers, Homework Helpers and our Paws to Read dogs.
We asked a few volunt
eers why they give so generously of their time and talent. Surabhi Kaushik has led writing programs and helped at events for about four years – in that time, she’s logged well over 400 hours of service. Kaushik shared “Volunteering at the Library has been an enjoyable learning experience for me because it has given me a space to showcase my talents, meet new people and be part of a welcoming community. The writing group has given me a sense of belonging which was important to me as a newbie immigrant.”
In November 2020, Surabhi was awarded the North Carolina Governor’s Award for Volunteer Service.
VolunTeen David Clinkscales has been volunteering at University City Regional Library since he was just thirteen years old. “My favorite part of volunteering at the Library is participating in storytime. Seeing the children follow the dances, run around smiling and interacting makes me always want to come back.” Clinkscales explains, “Libraries are important because the library is where most children first learn and develop the literacy, math and social skills necessary for school. The Library helps the surrounding community, and volunteering allows me to be a part of that improvement.”
We are forever grateful to Library volunteers and all volunteers who dedicate themselves to improving lives and building a stronger community. We look forward to working with our volunteers, new and current, in the future.
Questions about volunteering? Email the volunteer coordinator at [email protected].
These programs feature fun, interactive activities for the entire family ranging from storytimes and book talks as well as virtual author visits by this year’s signature authors Carmen Agra Deedy and Suzanne Bloom. This year’s celebration also features an exciting virtual visit from Charlotte Hornets mascot Hugo the Hornet.



The extracurricular information is that nearly 500 years later, the Bard’s prolific work as poet and writer is still as relevant today as when first published. Very few authors or their works can transcend time or adapt to cultures, yet somehow his work does. With themes like love, death, ambition, power, fate and free will, along with his influence on language, Shakespeare’s works have become timeless. Some of the most popular words you may recognize that the Bard coined include bandit, critic, dauntless, dwindle, green-eyed (to describe jealousy), lackluster and swagger. In total, Shakespeare came up with 422 whole new words. 
A few years ago, I attended the Milwaukee Repertory Theater’s production of Othello. It took the play out of Renaissance Venice and into the biker gang culture of contemporary times with gang-attire and an incessant rock beat bringing to life all the great dialogue. Framed as rival motorcycle gangs The Venetians and The Turks, it was, basically, Othello on a Harley with a love relationship between a white woman and a Black man. I remember watching enthralled, astonished and entranced that a play written in 1603 could resonate so clearly more than 400 years later. (Othello production photos courtesy of Milwaukee Repertory Theater.)