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For Immediate
Release - November 14, 2001
For more information contact:
Chris Finan, American Booksellers
Foundation for Free Expression, (212) 587-4025
NEW YORK, NY -- As kids around the country eagerly await the
opening of the film "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" this
week, a coalition of free expression groups today announced the
launch of a Web site dedicated to defending the free speech rights
of kids, including the right to read the Harry Potter books. kidSPEAK!
(www.kidspeakonline.org) is the successor to Muggles for Harry
Potter, a Web site created last year when objections over the
depiction of witchcraft in the Potter books led some public schools
to restrict their use. "kidSPEAK! will pick up where Muggles left
off, expanding the fight against censorship of the Harry Potter
books to include a defense of the hundreds of other books that
are challenged every year because someone thinks they are 'harmful'
to kids," Chris Finan, president of the American Booksellers Foundation
for Free Expression, said.
For the last two years, author J.K. Rowling's novels about the
boy wizard have topped both the bestseller lists and the American
Library Association's list of challenged books, which included
646 titles in 2000. Challenges to the Potter books have continued
this year. In June, a library in Oskaloosa, Kansas, cancelled
a reading program that involved the Potter books because of complaints.
The most recent challenge to use of the Potter books in the schools
occurred last month when a parent tried unsuccessfully to have
them banned in Duval County, Florida. Earlier this year, several
Harry Potter books were burned by the pastor of a church in western
Pennsylvania. (Links to news stories describing these incidents
can be found in the kidSPEAK! News section of the Web site.)
kidSPEAK! is intended to serve primarily the middle school students
who have rallied so strongly to the defense of the Harry Potter
books, swelling the membership of Muggles for Harry Potter to
over 18,000 in only a few months last year. "These kids showed
they have a keen dislike for censorship," Finan said. "Our Web
site is designed to inform them of the wide range of challenges
to the First Amendment rights of kids, to give them a place to
express themselves on the issue and to teach them how to fight
back."
In addition to ABFFE, the
sponsors of the kidSPEAK! Web site are the Association
of American Publishers, the Association
of Booksellers for Children, the Children's
Book Council, the Freedom to
Read Foundation, the National
Coalition Against Censorship, the National
Council of Teachers of English, PEN
American Center and People for the
American Way Foundation.
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