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Free Expression Network Opposes Zeeland School Restrictions on Harry Potter The undersigned organizations, members of the Free Expression Network, oppose the restrictions imposed on the use of J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter books by Zeeland, Michigan, School Superintendent Gary Feenstra on November 22, 1999. These restrictions include a ban on classroom readings of the Potter books; a requirement of parental permission to borrow the books from school libraries and to use them for book reports; and a decision not to buy any future books in the series. We believe that these restrictions violate the First Amendment rights of students, teachers and parents in Zeeland. While Superintendent Feenstra says that he is protecting the rights of those whose religious views might be offended by the Potter books, what he has actually done is to impose those views on the rest of the community. By silencing teachers and removing books with proven educational value from library shelves, he has committed an act of censorship. Perhaps the most lamentable part of Superintendent Feenstra's policy is his decision not to buy future titles in the Potter series based on the view that "controversial" books have no place in the public schools. In 1998, Judge Stephen Reinhardt of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit pointed out the danger of removing a book from the schools simply because it is controversial. In Monteiro v. Tempe High School, a parent had challenged the inclusion of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn on a mandatory high school reading list, claiming that the book's depiction of blacks was offensive. In his opinion, Judge Reinhardt asked what books would remain for students if every group could suppress those it found objectionable:
Banning books impoverishes our elementary schools no less than our high schools. Censorship is the wrong way for both parents and school officials to deal with material like the Potter books that they may find offensive. While parents have a right to ask that their children be excused from classroom readings of works they dislike, we believe that it would be better for them to talk to their children about their objections. If respect for free speech is optional for parents, it is mandatory for public schools. Banning the use of Potter books in the classroom and restricting access to them in school libraries because of the religious objections of some parents violates the First Amendment, imposes the sensitivities and religious viewpoints of a few parents on the entire school community and does a serious disservice to the education of children in the Zeeland Public Schools American Booksellers Foundation
for Free Expression April 10, 2000 Return to FEN Home
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