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Censorship: Toronto School Board Pulls Another One; Aldana Speaks Ou

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  • Censorship: Toronto School Board Pulls Another One; Aldana Speaks Ou

    CENSORSHIP: TORONTO SCHOOL BOARD PULLS ANOTHER ONE; ALDANA SPEAKS OUT
    By Derek Weiler

    Quillblog
    http://www.quillandquire.com/blo g/index.php/2008/05/20/toronto-school-board-pulls- another-one-aldana-speaks-out/
    May 20 2008
    Canada

    As the Toronto Star reports, the Toronto District School Board has
    removed a Barbara Coloroso book from its high school curriculum.

    Barbara Coloroso's Extraordinary Evil: A Brief History of Genocide
    had been selected as a resource for a new Grade 11 history course
    about genocide and crimes against humanity, but the book and the
    course came under review after they were challenged by members of
    the Canadian Turkish community.

    While the board's review committee decided to remove Coloroso's
    book from the curriculum, deeming it "far from a scrupulous text,"
    the Armenian genocide will still be taught in the course.

    The move comes two years after the same school board limited access
    to Deborah Ellis's Three Wishes (Groundwood Books), a book about the
    Israel-Palestine conflict, to students in Grade 7 or older. There's
    been no comment or statement on the Extraordinary Evil situation
    from the book's publisher, Penguin Canada, which had not returned
    messages from Q&Q at the time of this post. But Groundwood publisher
    Patsy Aldana has released an open letter to the board; it appears in
    full below.

    Dear Trustees and staff of the TDSB,

    As the publisher of Groundwood Books I am suffering from déja vu. Once
    again you are succumbing to pressure and pulling a book. This is the
    THREE WISHES controversy all over again.

    I am also the publisher of a different book on genocide currently
    listed for your course. In light of this decision I have to wonder
    for how long. Our book GENOCIDE: a Groundwork Guide by Jane Springer
    presents a different definition of genocide from Coloroso's though
    our book also describes the events in Armenia as genocide. As in the
    case of THREE WISHES it would seem that Coloroso's book among others
    was originally selected by knowledgeable people for a reason. Now
    all of a sudden it's "inappropriate."

    What is offensive in your decision is that it reflects what seems
    to have become the TDSB's habitual response to pressure - get rid
    of books that are "problematic." This is a Grade 11 course - thus
    obviating the weasel words "age inappropriate" used in the THREE WISHES
    case. Is Barbara Coloroso's argument unworthy of being considered,
    discussed, debated? Bernard Lewis is a noted Islamophobe and yet you
    seem to have included him in your course. Why not - isn't the point
    of education to stimulate critical thinking? Or have you already
    decided what kids should think about this difficult topic in advance?

    As a citizen of Canada, as a resident of Toronto, as a book publisher,
    as a human being I find the TDSB's reflexive instinct to censor
    problematic, contentious, or (in the view of one group or another)
    incorrect books and their points of view deeply disturbing. Have
    you learned nothing? Our children need, urgently, to be educated to
    be critical thinkers capable of drawing their own conclusions based
    on a range of ideas. TDSB does not seem to embrace this principle,
    quite the contrary. You are once again doing the children you have
    been charged with educating a terrible injustice.

    I condemn your withdrawal of this book. It is deplorable. It is
    inexcusable. And I wonder what book will you be afraid to give to
    our children next?

    --Boundary_(ID_0tN71r4innne6FSFdoCFuA)--
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