A short board meeting prompted by a single letter—describing one of the most significant pieces of Black literature in American history as "filthy"—was all that five members of the Randolph County Board of Education needed to feel justified in voting to ban the novel last week.1
It's just the kind of quiet injustice—and officially-sanctioned bias—that happens behind closed doors in towns across the country all of the time.
But this time, we have an opportunity to push back.
If a couple of bad press hits is enough to make Randolph reconsider, imagine how powerful thousands of our voices can be.
Just last week, the president of the Ohio Board of Education called Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye "pornographic."3
And in July, a Detroit-area school district came under fire for dumping a collection of over 10,000 volumes of invaluable Black books and artifacts.4
Enough is enough!
For elected officials concerned with the education of our young people, it's particularly perverse that Randolph's school board failed to recognize the irony of banning a book that's about silencing critical voices and the ways in which racist culture restricts individuals from reaching their full human potential.
September 23rd, 2013
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http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2956?t=7&akid=3134.153865.D28u7E
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