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Schools banned books about Black life. Black kids are reading anyway.

Some Black students are launching book clubs and organizing protests to defend books that have been targeted in a national battle against critical race theory.


ByTat Bellamy-Walker

Christina and Renee Ellis, students at Central York High School, a predominantly white school in Pennsylvania, helped reverse a book ban targeting the work of Black authors.


For about a month, the sisters and several of their classmates in the Panther Anti-Racist Union, a student-led racial and social justice advocacy group, protested the challenge after an all-white school board banned diverse educational materials, including a book about Rosa Parks; “Hidden Figures,” a story about Black female mathematicians; and the documentary “I Am Not Your Negro,” about the author and cultural critic James Baldwin.


Dozens of students, parents and educators held brightly colored signs with slogans like “BLM” and “Education is not indoctrination” outside the school. Edha Gupta, one of the organizers, also wrote letters to the editor of the city’s newspaper, while others read excerpts of the banned books on Instagram. Renee said the protests were an important step in holding the district accountable for fostering an inclusive environment for students of color.



The Panther Anti-Racist Union.Panther Anti-Racist Union


“We didn’t want history to repeat itself, with hiding history, hiding the experiences of people of color in this country,” Renee said. “We also wanted to make sure that the younger kids underneath got a full education, especially with the murder of George Floyd and the murder of Breonna Taylor and so many other social justice issues in America.”


Christina said it’s crucial for young Black students to see themselves in books.


“If a little girl or Black girl goes into her school library and can’t find a single book that represents her and people are telling her that she doesn’t really matter, she will treat herself as such. She will act like she doesn’t matter, and that’s how a cycle continues,” Christina said.


The Ellis sisters are two examples of young people who are fighting back after a conservative wave of activism led to books’ being banned in schools and libraries. Even though some parents claim that their children would be uncomfortable reading literature about race and LGBTQ issues, students initiate fewer than 1 percent of book challenges in the U.S., while parents and patrons account for more than half, according to the American Library Association, a book monitoring group.


In addition, the bans aren’t keeping students away from diverse literature.


“There’s nothing more attractive to a kid than a forbidden book,” author Mikki Kendall said last month. “I’m watching kids respond by saying, ‘Well, I read the book to see what they were so upset about.’”


Jaiden Johnson, a seventh grader at Meridian World School in Round Rock, Texas, said his school library temporarily had a section of banned books, which became extremely popular among students.

“There was a bunch of kids crowded trying to get through trying to check out all the books, because they wanted to read them before they went away again,” said Jaiden, who is 12.


He is one of two Black middle school students who started the Round Rock Black Students Book Club, a virtual student-led community group in which students of color can read books about characters that represent them.






Jaiden Johnson is one of the leaders of the Round Rock Black Students

Book Club.Jaiden Johnson

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