[Congressional Record Volume 170, Number 50 (Thursday, March 21, 2024)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2497-S2498]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Freedom of Speech
Ms. BUTLER. Mr. President, today, I rise to honor Women's History
Month and to once again bring attention to the destructive practice of
book banning taking place all across our Nation.
At this time, I am also going to be joined by my esteemed colleague,
Senator Tina Smith from Minnesota.
Our Nation's literature serves as a mirror, a window, and a door to
endless possibilities, fueling our imagination, fostering empathy, and
challenging us to think critically about our beliefs and values. To
many young Americans, opening a book with characters who resemble them
and their lived experiences is the very essence of our Nation's
commitment to freedom of thought. These stories highlight the voices of
everyday Americans who often go unheard.
Let me put the horrors of these book bans in context. PEN America
provides a comprehensive overview of the increase in book bans across
U.S. schools during the 2021 to 2022 school year. It reveals a
significant rise in instances of censorship, with over 2,500 cases
affecting nearly 1,650 unique titles. Most of these bans are driven by
organized groups targeting books that explore LGBTQ+ themes and racial
issues.
Adding on to this, in 2022, the American Library Association
documented 1,269 demands to censor library books and resources, marking
the highest number of attempted book bans in over 20 years and nearly
doubling the count from 2021. A significant 38-percent increase was
observed in the number of unique titles targeted, with the majority
concerning LGBTQIA+ topics or authored by individuals from diverse
racial backgrounds.
The worst part is that these challenges are increasingly initiated by
groups rather than individuals, with a shift toward targeting multiple
titles at once. It is the new veneer by which historical revisionists
intend to erode the history of our people.
I am all but obligated to ensure that all forms of expression remain
unrestrained. Just as rivers carve the landscapes of America,
literature has the profound capacity to shape the minds and lives of
America's youth. These stories flow through their consciousness,
eroding old biases, watering seeds of new ideas, and guiding them along
the path of self-discovery. In navigating these waters, young people
learn to understand and embrace their identities, recognize their place
in a larger narrative, and appreciate the diversity of the human
experience.
Literature, in its boundless forms, acts as a river--constantly
moving, shaping, and transforming the selfhood of our youth, guiding
them toward the vast ocean of their potential.
Growing up in rural Mississippi and as the descendant of
sharecroppers, my journey echoes the narratives of resilience and
perseverance that are deeply rooted in American history, and so I found
solace reading the words of the great Maya Angelou--one of our Nation's
quintessential civil rights leaders and one of its most prolific
writers. With her profound literary and societal contributions, Angelou
left an indelible mark across America.
Angelou's voice, particularly through her autobiography ``I Know Why
the Caged Bird Sings,'' offers deep insights into the human condition,
advocating for civil rights and female empowerment. Yet, proponents of
book banning do not believe that her story and her perspective have a
place in our national narrative.
``I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings'' is set against the backdrop of
the rural South, providing a poignant exploration of Angelou's own
experiences growing up as a Black girl in America during the Great
Depression of the 1930s and 1940s. Her words encapsulate the essence of
American beauty.
[[Page S2498]]
It is not just the triumphs but also the struggles that shape us,
guiding our paths to becoming who we are meant to be. ``I Know Why the
Caged Bird Sings'' is a testament to the human spirit's capacity for
resilience, for transformation, and for triumph over adversity, making
it a timeless and essential piece of literature. Every child in this
Nation should have the opportunity to read it if they are truly to
understand the history of the United States.
In her writing, Maya Angelou offers:
Without willing it, I had gone from being ignorant of being
ignorant to being aware of being aware. And the worst part of
my awareness was that I didn't know what I was aware of. I
knew very little, but I was certain that the things I had yet
to learn wouldn't be taught to me at George Washington High
School. I began to cut classes, to walk in Golden Gate Park
or wander along the shiny counter of the Emporium Department
Store. When Mother discovered that I was playing truant, she
told me that if I didn't want to go to school one day, if
there were no tests being held, and if my school work was up
to standard, all I had to do was tell her and I could stay
home. She said that she didn't want some white woman calling
her up to tell her something about her child that she didn't
know. And she didn't want to be put in the position of lying
to a white woman because I wasn't woman enough to speak up.
That put an end to my truancy, but nothing appeared to
lighten the long gloomy day that going to school became. To
be left alone on the tightrope of youthful unknowing is to
experience the excruciating beauty of full freedom and the
threat of eternal indecision.
Few, if any, survive their teens. Most surrender to the
vague but murderous pressure of adult conformity. It becomes
easier to die and avoid conflicts than to maintain a constant
battle with the superior forces of maturity. Until recently
each generation found it more expedient to plead guilty to
the charge of being young and ignorant, easier to take the
punishment meted out by the older generation (which had
itself confessed to the same crime short years before).
The command to grow up at once was more bearable than the
faceless horror of wavering purpose, which was youth. The
bright hours when the young rebelled against the descending
sun had to give way to twenty-four-hour periods called
``days'' that were named as well as numbered. The Black
female is assaulted in her tender years by all those common
forces of nature at the same time that she is caught in the
tripartite crossfire of masculine prejudice, white illogical
hate and Black lack of power. The fact that the adult
American Negro female emerges a formidable character is often
met with amazement, distaste, and even belligerence. It is
seldom accepted as an inevitable outcome of the struggle won
by survivors and deserves respect if not enthusiastic
acceptance.
To those advancing the banning of books, I ask you to pause and
reflect on a moment when a book truly spoke to you. Let that memory
guide you to understand the power of literature, not just as a mirror
of society but as a builder of empathy and understanding across diverse
experiences. Consider the richness these narratives bring to our
collective understanding and the importance of keeping that diversity
accessible for all.
Literature, like rivers carving landscape, shapes the minds and lives
of our youth, guiding them toward self-discovery and empowering them to
embrace their identities.
Maya Angelou's work exemplifies the resilience and strength of
marginalized communities--of the community of Black women--offering
profound insights into the human experience.
I urge my colleagues to reflect on the transformative power of
literature and to join me on the Senate floor to read an excerpt from a
banned book that changed their lives but has since been banned from the
lives of others.
May we continue to strive for a future where every voice is heard and
every story is valued. May America read freely.
Now I turn to my colleague, Senator Smith from Minnesota.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Minnesota.
Ms. SMITH. Mr. President, I rise today to speak out about the absurd
book bannings that are happening in schools across our country. I want
to thank Senator Butler for inviting me to speak today about this
issue.
You know, I was reflecting, as I was listening to Senator Butler
speak in the beginning, about what reading meant to me when I was a
young person and when I was first understanding what it felt like to be
immersed in a book that I loved--that feeling of learning, of being
able to imagine myself living different lives, being able to think
about what different experiences would be like, and understanding that
my life was not everybody's life, that there is such diversity of life
in this world, and being exposed to that through reading was so
exciting to me.
Also, as I was seeing how I was not like everybody else, I was also
able to see myself in the people whom I read about--both my own
struggles as well as triumphs in the stories that I read--and that is
the gift of reading. So to think about the absurdity of trying to block
that gift from people because of one's own views about what is OK and
what is not OK is, I think, what is at issue here.
So I appreciate very much having the opportunity to read into the
Record incredible authors whose works have been unfairly banned.
To my colleagues, I think it is interesting that, just last week, the
American Library Association released new data documenting how
prevalent this is. They are documenting book challenges that are
happening throughout the United States, and they found a huge surge in
these challenges--a 65-percent increase in challenges to books just in
2023. It is the highest level the ALA has ever recorded.
Among the books that were banned last year is a book called ``And
Tango Makes Three.'' This is a book by Justin Richardson and Peter
Parnell. It is a demonstration of the absurdity of banning books--this
book in particular. It is based on the real story of two penguins in
the Central Park Zoo who create a family and raise a chick together.
Both of these penguins were male, and so a Florida school district
banned the book because of their State's ``don't say gay'' law. Now I
am going to read a bit of the text because I think it shows so much.
Here we go.
[C]hildren and their parents aren't the only families at
the zoo. The animals make families of their own. There are
red panda bear families, with mothers and fathers and furry
red panda bear cubs. There are monkey dads and monkey moms
raising noisy monkey babies. There are toad families, and
toucan families, and cotton-top tamarin families too.
And in the penguin house there are penguin families. Every
year at the very same time, the girl penguins start noticing
the boy penguins. And the boy penguins start noticing the
girls. When the right girl and the right boy find each other,
they become a couple.
Two penguins in the penguin house were a little bit
different. One was named Roy, the other was named Silo. Roy
and Silo were both boys. But they did everything together.
They bowed to each other. And they walked together. They
sang to each other. And [they] swam together.
They didn't spend much time with the girl penguins, and the
girl penguins didn't spend much time with them. Instead, Roy
and Silo wound their necks around each other. Their keeper
Mr. Gramzay noticed the two penguins and thought to himself,
``They must be in love.''
Now, I have four grandchildren, and I think that reading a story like
this to them--reading this story to them--is exactly what should be
happening as children and people of all ages really think about what it
means to love one another, what it means to be a family, and how we can
come together in that idea rather than being driven apart.
I hope and will do everything I can to make sure that my four
grandchildren live in a future where books that affirm that families
can come in all different forms and in all different shapes and sizes
aren't considered worth banning.
I thank Senator Butler for organizing this discussion.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.
Mr. YOUNG. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to use a prop
during my remarks.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.