Hasna Gabsi, a conservator at the National Library of Tunis, searches through shelves of newspapers from the middle of the 19th century to choose the most recent to scan.
She selects a faded copy of an 1880s-era Arabic-language newspaper and moves on to the sections containing Spanish, French, Italian, Maltese, and Maltese-language publications written in Tunisia.
Under the flashing neon lights, Gabsi added, “The archive is a witness to an essential, historical civilization.”
The library’s collection includes some 16,000 titles printed in Tunisia — numbering hundreds of thousands of editions of newspapers and periodicals.
As part of a campaign to preserve the country’s archives, the library staff have been working to digitize the documents.
Most of the newspapers are in Arabic, with the oldest from the mid-19th century when Tunisia was an Ottoman province.
After France occupied Tunisia in 1881, European settlers published periodicals in several languages, including French, Italian, Spanish and Maltese.
Some publications are even in Judeo-Arabic, a local Arabic dialect written in the Hebrew alphabet.
Gabsi selects a copy of Voix d’Israel, a Hebrew-language newspaper printed by Tunisia’s Jewish community, which numbered around 100,000 when the country gained independence from France in 1956.
Further along the shelves, she picks out L’Unione, published in 1886 by an Italian community that would number some 130,000 by the middle of the following century.
Nearby, technicians use huge scanners to digitize the newspapers and other documents, which have been made available to the public online since May.
The library’s director Raja Ben Slama has brought together a team of around 20 employees to accelerate the process.
She said the importance of preserving the newspapers was clear to her when she arrived in 2015.
“We are in a race against time with the elements against the deterioration of the periodicals,” she said.
Some of them “can’t be found anywhere else”, she added.
Many of the publications have disappeared, particularly those published in Italian, Hebrew and Maltese.
Economic woes and tensions sparked by the Arab-Israeli conflict led to the departure of most of the country’s Jewish community, while most Italians left in the years after independence.
For historian Abdessattar Amamou, the archives are rare in the region, reflecting the “mosaic” of different communities that were present in the North African country.
“At the dawn of independence, we were three million people — but with that came a huge richness on the level of the press,” Amamou added.