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Far from Home: Human Library

By Scott Gurian

A visit to Copenhagen's Human Library, where the "readers" and "books" are people having deeply personal and intimate conversations about topics that might normally be considered off-limits or taboo in polite society. From the podcast Far from Home by journalist Scott Gurian.

EPISODE NOTES

In the Nørrebro neighborhood of Copenhagen, there's a small building with a garden and wooden seats. At first glance, it looks like some sort of neighborhood cafe, but it's actually the Menneskebiblioteket or Human Library, where the "readers" and "books" are people having deeply personal and intimate conversations about topics that might normally be considered off-limits or taboo in polite society. The library is staffed by volunteers whose life stories and experiences mean they face some sort of stigma, whether it be due to their ethnicity, religion, orientation, occupation, disability, or social status.

Journalist Scott Gurian visited the Human Library and produced this episode for his award-winning documentary-style travel and culture podcast Far from Home. And we loved it so much that we wanted you to hear it too.

Since its beginning in Denmark, the Human Library concept has now spread to more than 80 countries on 6 continents. You can visit the library's Facebook page to find out about upcoming human library events near you.

Find all four seasons of Far from Home where ever you listen to podcasts.