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Freedom to read celebrated locally

The pressure to limit public access to books is an issue education boards and library trustees encounter regularly.

The pressure to limit public access to books is an issue education boards and library trustees encounter regularly.

Some books are ordered off the shelves while others are quietly removed from school reading lists.

To keep up awareness and to focus public attention on the vital issue of intellectual freedom, local libraries are celebrating Freedom to Read Week from Feb. 20 to 26.

“Freedom to read can never be taken for granted,” says Mary Donlan, children’s librarian at Vancouver Island Regional Library. “Even in Canada, a free country by world standards, books and magazines are frequently banned at the border, and now on the Internet free speech is under attack.”

During Freedom to Read Week, library visitors will see a display of recently challenged books such as And Tango Makes Three, a picture book by Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell; Negima!, a manga series from Japan by Ken Akamatsu; and the movie Borat.

Three of J.K. Rowling’s popular series — Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, and Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban — have been targets of censorship attempts.

For more information, contact Mari Martin by calling 250-334-3369, extension 4.

— Courtenay Library