Get Involved
Tools and Resources
Library Outreach
Library
Displays · Donating Videos and Books to Libraries
Library Displays
Library
displays are a simple, but effective tool activists can use to educate
the public about the suffering of farm animals. Many libraries make space
available to community groups who are willing to design, assemble, and
erect their own displays.
Contacting
Your Library About a Display
- Ask the
librarian if your library has display space.
- Ask if
community groups and nonprofit organizations can use this space for
displays. You may need to provide library management with information
on the organization you represent, make assurances that your display
will be appropriate for all library visitors, and explain in detail
the contents of your display.
- Find out
how much space is available for a display. Consider down-sizing your
display if the space seems too small or find a different library that
can accommodate you.
- Remember
that many libraries have waiting lists for display space. It is very
likely that space will not be immediately available. Fill out all the
necessary paperwork to reserve a space for your display then explore
other libraries that might allow you to get started right away.
Purchase
a Display from Farm Sanctuary
Farm Sanctuary now carries two types of pre-assembled library displays.
We offer a Factory
Farming display and also a Veg
for Life display. The displays consist of educational and attention
grabbing signs and a black 32" x 48" foam trifold display board.
The signs are laminated for extra durability and are attached to the board
with Velcro. The Velcro attachment allows for easy conversion depending
on your audience or event. The price for one display, including one set
of laminated signs is $25.00. The display plus both
sets of laminated signs is $40.00.
Planning
Your Display
The best library displays include text, images, and literature. Your display,
ideally, will not only catch the attention of library patrons, but also
hold it. Photographs, posters, and a wide variety of brochures and pamphlets
can be ordered from Farm Sanctuary. We recommend displays designed around
Farm Sanctuary's Veg for Life or Sentient Beings campaigns.
The Veg for Life materials provide informative resources on the
benefits of a vegetarian diet for health, for the environment and for
animals relevant to a broad spectrum of individuals in your community.
The Sentient Beings Campaign offers information and pictures educating
the public about the dynamic personalities and behaviors of farm animals,
showing people often for the first time that farm animals are more than
just "food." The positive and broad approach of these campaigns
may be more likely to be permitted in libraries than displays with graphic
factory farming imagery and information.
TEXT:
1) The
largest section of text in any display should be the title. Make sure
the title of your display can be seen from a considerable distance away.
Also, be sure the title effectively captures the message you are trying
to impart.
2) All of the text in your display should be straight forward and easy
to understand. Try to maintain a balance between text and imagery. Every
image in your display should be accompanied by text, but you do not
want to overwhelm your viewers with too many words.
3) Consider using memorable, historical quotes or thought-provoking
questions about animals to grab attention.
IMAGES:
1) You
do not need to use graphic photographs to get your message across. Pictures
of calves in veal crates or hens in battery cages, for instance, reveal
the cruelty of factory farming methods without overwhelming viewers
with blood and gore.
2) The images in your display should impact library patrons on an emotional
level. A simple photograph that reveals the intensity and feeling in
an animal's eyes often has the power to move an audience. If you can
get your audience to feel something when they look at your display,
they will be more likely to pay attention to your message.
LITERATURE:
1) Be
sure to stock your display table with literature that library patrons
can take home with them. Provide a wide variety of literature on farm
animal issues so that patrons can read up on the topics that interest
them most.
2) Take-home literature is crucial to any effective display because
it allows viewers to consider your message long after they have seen
your display. Take-home literature also increases the possibility that
those who saw your display will contact your organization or tell others
about what they saw.
3) Consider working with the librarian to make animal rights books in
circulation at the library available at your display table. If your
local branch does not carry many titles on animal issues, you can donate
books to the library yourself.
Once your
display is up and running. . .
- Make
sure to visit the library frequently to restock literature and straighten
your text and photographs
- Move on
to another library! Contact as many libraries as you can to set up another
display and continue to spread the word about farm animal issues!
To order
literature, click
here.
Donating
Videos and Books to Libraries
The next time you visit your local library, take a look around you
here is your community, and there are dozens of chances every day to educate
people on farm animal suffering. By making videos and books on vegetarianism
and farm animal issues available to the public through your library, you
will actively educate your neighbors on the reality of the food animal
industry, eradicate misconceptions that farm animals are commonly raised
in humane environments, and reveal to many the benefits of a vegetarian
lifestyle.
The factory
farming industry's efforts to hide what goes on behind closed doors and
discourage vegetarianism have been successful until now. Recent public
opinion polls demonstrate that Americans are against farm animal cruelty
once they know it exists and many more Americans go vegetarian everyday.
Supplying your local library with powerful videotapes that reveal farm
animal abuse and books that show how rewarding a vegetarian lifestyle
can be, will educate your neighbors on the realities of modern-day farming
and tempt them to change the way they eat.
Vegan
Vittles
Vegan
Vittles is Farm Sanctuary's own innovative and informational cookbook.
Filled with hundreds of delicious recipes, information about factory farming
and vegetarian philosophy, and countless tips and resources to help people
enjoy vegetarian cuisine, Vegan Vittles would be an excellent addition
to any library collection.
Order
a copy of Vegan Vittles from Farm Sanctuary today.
Life
Behind Bars
Life Behind Bars provides a rare first-hand look inside factory
farm warehouses and exposes the brutal reality that agribusiness wants
to keep hidden from public view. This powerful documentary, narrated by
Mary Tyler Moore, is the perfect tool for educating others on the issues
of factory farming.
Here's how
to donate educational videos and books such as Life Behind Bars
and Vegan Vittles.
1) Contact
your local library by phone or stop by in person. To donate videos,
ask for the librarian in charge of the audio/visual department. To donate
books, ask for the librarian in charge of book donations.
2) Describe the video/book you are offering to donate. Share our one-page
description of the Life Behind Bars video with your library.
Try using our script with ideas
on how to approach your library.
3) If your library has a bulletin board or area to display pamphlets,
post information that the video is available for viewing or circulation
at your library. Download
a promotional poster for the Life Behind Bars video to display.
Order
a copy of Life Behind Bars from Farm Sanctuary today.
To get more
involved in this and other activist projects, join Farm Sanctuary's Activist
Network. Please click
here to fill out our online Activist Questionnaire.
For additional
information, please call (607) 583-2225 ext. 229 or e-mail activist@farmsanctuary.org.
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