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“The arrogance of the board majority is appalling. The message being
that if you don’t see things their way, you’re not invited to the party.”
We wrote those words in December, when we criticized the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District board of trustees for once again snubbing fellow
trustee Wendy Leece by refusing to appoint her to the president’s post.
And while we stand by our statements today, the irony of those words
is now hard for us to escape.
The very same Wendy Leece, the very same trustee whom we defended even
though the content of her message often differed from the board’s and
ours, has asked that two books be removed from the classroom for the same
reason -- the content of the books’ message.
That’s unfortunate. Because if it’s wrong for the board to exclude and
vilify those things it doesn’t agree with, it’s wrong for Leece as well.
And it is almost always wrong to ban books.
We admit the rich tapestry that is literature is not always
antiseptic. And true, the books that Leece finds offensive -- “Snow
Falling on Cedars,” by David Guterson, and “Of Love and Shadows,” by
Isabel Allende -- have rough edges.
All great books do.
But instead of dwelling on the sexual content that Leece finds
offensive, we urge all to take a look at the bigger messages that these
books and most serious works of literature convey, those of humanity’s
struggles, triumphs and tragedies.
Further, the books in question are intended for high school students,
not elementary school pupils.
These are students who are faced with a deluge of less than wholesome
pop culture and teen idols every day. These are students struggling to
understand their own identity and answer their own questions.
Books can help them do that. Even these books.
We’re not saying that our teens should sign up for the Playboy
book-of-the-month club.
But we have to believe that force-feeding high school students what
amounts to daily doses of vanilla will most certainly leave them wanting
for more.
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