A parent in the Dallas suburb of Prosper wanted the school district to ban a children’s picture book about the life of Black Olympian Wilma Rudolph, because it mentions racism that Rudolph faced growing up in Tennessee in the 1940s.
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“Why are our libraries filled with pornography?”Īnother parent in Katy, a Houston suburb, asked the district to remove a children’s biography of Michelle Obama, arguing that it promotes “reverse racism” against white people, according to the records obtained by NBC News. “Why are we sexualizing our precious children?” a Katy parent said at a November school board meeting after she suggested that books about LGBTQ relationships are causing children to improperly question their gender identities and sexual orientations. Many of the books under fire are newer titles, purchased by school librarians in recent years as part of a nationwide movement to diversify the content available to public school children. A handful of the districts reported more challenges this year than in the past two decades combined.Īll but a few of the challenges this school year targeted books dealing with racism or sexuality, the majority of them featuring LGBTQ characters and explicit descriptions of sex. In comparison, only one library book challenge was filed at those districts during the same time period a year earlier, records show. Records requests to nearly 100 school districts in the Houston, Dallas, San Antonio and Austin regions - a small sampling of the state’s 1,250 public school systems - revealed 75 formal requests by parents or community members to ban books from libraries during the first four months of this school year. Hundreds of titles have been pulled from libraries across the state for review, sometimes over the objections of school librarians, several of whom told NBC News they face increasingly hostile work environments and mounting pressure to pre-emptively pull books that might draw complaints. Her safe haven is now a battleground in an unprecedented effort by parents and conservative politicians in Texas to ban books dealing with race, sexuality and gender from schools, an NBC News investigation has found. You should be able to see yourself reflected on the page.”
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“And I’m sure it’s really important to other queer kids. “As I’ve struggled with my own identity as a queer person, it’s been really, really important to me that I have access to these books,” said the girl, whom NBC News is not naming to avoid revealing her sexuality.
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Some titles were removed after parents formally complained, but others were quietly banned by the district without official reviews. Also banished: “The Handsome Girl and Her Beautiful Boy,” “All Boys Aren’t Blue” and “Lawn Boy” - all coming-of-age stories that prominently feature LGBTQ characters and passages about sex. Gone: “Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts),” a book she’d read last year about a gay teenager who isn’t shy about discussing his adventurous sex life.
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That space, with its endless rows of books about characters from all sorts of backgrounds, has been her “safe haven,” she said - one of the few places where she feels completely free to be herself.īut books, including one of her recent favorites, have been vanishing from the shelves of Katy Independent School District libraries the past few months. ‘Short-circuiting’ the process Book fight spreads from Virginia to Texas ‘Taking the matter seriously’