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FREEDOM TO READ: The Right To Read

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  • FREEDOM TO READ: The Right To Read

    FREEDOM TO READ: THE RIGHT TO READ

    VUE Weekly
    http://www.vueweekly.com/article.php?id=143 57
    Feb 18 2010
    Canada

    Freedom to Read week explores access to challenging books Tiffany
    Brown-Olsen / [email protected]

    We have access to more information, books and magazines than ever
    before but many people, including librarian Ken Setterington, argue
    that we must remain on guard in the fight for intellectual freedom. As
    the Children and Youth Advocate for the Toronto Public Library, and
    the author of the children's book Mom and Mum Are Getting Married,
    Setterington sees the positive results of a free exchange of ideas
    on both adults and children. He also sees that challenges to books
    in schools and libraries occur regularly.

    "There are constantly challenges that come up in the most surprising
    ways," he explains. "All the Harry Potter books were challenged and
    the Philip Pullman books were challenged not that long ago. People
    get upset about a variety of things and we have to be ready to leap
    to the defense of these books."

    Librarians across Canada defend books because they understand the
    value of free and open dialogue. To help make the public aware of
    the continual skirmishes in this ongoing fight and to mark Freedom
    to Read Week, taking place February 21 - 27, The Book and Periodical
    Council has released a list of challenged books and magazine.

    The Challenged Books and Magazines List contains some challenges that
    are not so surprising: parents have complained about their children
    reading Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, arguing it contained racist
    language; a patron of a public library disapproved of Maxim magazine
    for being pornographic; and The New York City Bartender's Joke Book by
    Jimmy Pritchard was challenged in Saskatoon for containing offensive
    material. In the first two cases the library retained the items
    in their collection, while the joke book was found to be offensive
    and withdrawn.

    Challenges do not just come from people disapproving of sexual or
    adult content; challenges also come in the form of human rights
    complaints. The publication Catholic Insight was challenged by
    someone arguing it promoted hatred against gays and lesbians with
    its conservative religious message; the now-online magazine, Western
    Standard, was challenged for its publication of eight of the Danish
    cartoons of the Muslim prophet Mohammed in 2006; and most recently,
    Maclean's was challenged for printing a book excerpt dealing with
    Islam in Europe. These challenges illustrate the difficult issues
    considered when thinking about intellectual freedom.

    Catholic Insight was found to not be "likely to expose a person or
    persons to hatred or contempt based on sexual orientation" by the
    Canadian Human Rights Commission. Ezra Levant, the then publisher of
    the Western Standard, was brought before the Alberta Human Rights and
    Citizenship Commission and asked to explain his intent in publishing
    the cartoons. In his spirited defense, Levant vigorously argued that
    the commission, by forcing him to appear and defend his decision
    to publish, was attacking freedom of speech. The complaint against
    the Western Standard was eventually retracted, but the footage of
    the hearings, available on YouTube, is essential viewing for those
    interested in the questions surrounding freedom of expression in
    Canada. In the case of the complaint against Maclean's, three human
    rights commissions dismissed the complaint.

    Proponents of free speech argue that challenges, even when
    overturned, create an atmosphere of self-censorship. Freedom to Read
    Week celebrates both the freedom to read and the importance of the
    fight to keep that freedom. Jason Openo, Chair of the Edmonton Public
    Library's Adult Services Team and a member of the organizing committee
    for Edmonton's Freedom to Read Week, believes that libraries have
    a role in "facilitating democracy and civil rights" by bringing the
    widest range of materials into the libraries. Quoting from Canadian
    Library Association's statement on intellectual freedom he says,
    "It is the responsibility of libraries to guarantee and facilitate
    access to all expressions of knowledge and intellectual activity,
    including those that some elements of society may consider to be
    unconventional, unpopular or unacceptable."

    Setterington agrees, stating, "All these [challenged] books demand
    that somebody thinks and we want to create a society that is engaged
    with literature and is a thinking society."

    Freedom to Read Week events coordinated by the Edmonton Public Library
    give Edmontonians the opportunity to discuss these issues and express
    their own freedom. V

    CHALLENGED BOOKS

    Despite guarantees to freedom of speech in the Canadian Charter,
    books and publications can still find the path to your library and
    bookstore filled with obstacles. Here are just some of the books that
    have been challenged from being on Canadian bookshelves.

    The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood Cause of objection--A parent
    formally complained in 2008 about the use of a dystopian novel
    in a Grade 12 English class saying the novel's "profane language,"
    anti-Christian overtones, "violence" and "sexual degradation" probably
    violated the district school policies that require students to show
    respect and tolerance to one another.

    Update--In 2009, a review panel of the Toronto District School Board
    recommended that schools keep the novel in the curriculum in Grades
    11 and 12.

    Extraordinary Evil: A Brief History of Genocide by Barbara Coloroso
    Cause of objection--In 2007 The Council of Turkish Canadians objected
    to the inclusion of the book for a Grade 11 history course. The book
    describes the deaths of more than a million Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire early in the twentieth century as genocide. Update--In April
    2008, a committee of the Toronto District School Board decided to
    remove the book from the reading list because "a concern was raised
    regarding [its] appropriatenes." The decision to remove Extraordinary
    Evil, however, prompted new protests from the book's defenders,
    including Canadian publishers, the Writers' Union of Canada, the Book
    and Periodical Council and holocaust scholar Gerald Caplan. In June,
    the school board reversed its decision, putting the book back onto
    the recommended reading list.

    Three Wishes: Palestinian and Israeli Children Speak by Deborah
    Ellis--In 2006 the Canadian Jewish Congress urged public school
    boards to deny access to Three Wishes. Cause of objection--The CJC
    said that Ellis had provided a flawed historical introduction to the
    Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The CJC also said that some children
    in the book portrayed Israeli soldiers as brutal, expressed ethnic
    hatred and glorified suicide bombing. The effect on young student
    readers, the CJC said, was "toxic." Update--Although the Ontario
    Library Association (OLA) had recommended Three Wishes to schools
    as part of its acclaimed Silver Birch reading program, at least five
    school boards in Ontario set restrictions on the text.

    Source: Freedomtoread.ca
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