Prominent publishers have sent a letter to the New York City Department of Education expressing alarm that books featuring diverse characters and subjects were discarded with the trash at a Staten Island elementary school.
โWe are deeply concerned that silent or unacknowledged censorship may be going on in New York City schools,โ the letter said.
Gothamist reported last week that hundreds of books about Black history, immigration and LGBTQ+ characters were placed with the trash outside P.S. 55 on Staten Island, and hundreds more were given away. Attached to many of the books were sticky notes saying โnot approved.โ Some of the notes highlighted apparent concerns, including โnegative slant on white peopleโ and โteenage girls having a crush on another girl in class.โ
A sticky note on a kid’s book about Nina Simone discarded from PS 55 reads “This is about how black people were treated poorly but overcame it (can go both ways.)”
Holly Spiegel
โBecause school libraries play a crucial role in providing families with access to books, removing titles makes it difficult or even impossible for students to encounter information and ideas that are necessary to their intellectual development,โ read the letter written by Skip Dye, who chairs Penguin Random House’s Intellectual Freedom Committee.
Authors Against Book Bans, Candlewick Press, Charlesbridge, Hachette Books, Macmillan Publishers, Simon & Schuster, and Sourcebooks also signed on.
The publishers requested a meeting with education department officials โto explore ways in which we can work together to protect the First Amendment rights of NYC students in the future.โ
The education department condemned the decision to discard the books and launched an investigation. But officials said they had no update and that the investigation was ongoing more than a week after Gothamist reported on the controversy. It was still unclear who tossed out the books and why.
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