Marta Terry González
Quick Facts
Biography
Marta Terry González is a Cuban librarian. She is known for her leadership of several important libraries in post-revolutionary Cuba, including those of the Junta Central de Planificación (JUCEPLAN), Casa de las Américas, and the National Library José Martí, as well as her role in the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA). In these roles, she worked with well-known Cuban revolutionaries such as Che Guevara and Haydée Santamaría.
Early life
As a child, Marta helped her grandmother collect cigar butts after curfew so that her great-grandmother could smoke them in a pipe. She was homeschooled as a child due to her poor health. Her mother had died when she was young, so she was taught at home by her grandmother and her aunts, who worked as teachers. Several books left a strong early impression on her, including Corazón de Edmundo de Amicis and works by José Martí
Education
In 1948, Marta entered the University of Havana to study philosophy and literature. Her thesis for her master's degree was on the impact of chattel slavery on White society. In 1953, she visited the United States, where she experienced racial segregation in a Maryland restaurant. She saw American racial discrimination as puzzling and different from the anti-Black discrimination in Cuba.
Professional work
In 1961, Marta was appointed to lead the library at JUCEPLAN, the body responsible for economic planning in Cuba.
In 1980, Marta was one of the first two Cuban librarians to attend an IFLA conference. By 1994, she had became vice-president of IFLA and was also vice-president of its Havana Organizing Committee. Marta was recognized by IFLA as an honorary fellow, which is the federation's highest honor.
Throughout her professional career, Marta has striven to make sure that libraries serve the general public, rather than an educated and moneyed elite.