The Freedom to Read is an Essential Human - and Religious - Right!
The Freedom to Read is an Essential Human - and Religious - Right!
Host Rev. Paul Brandeis Raushenbush explores the urgent message of the Freedom To Read Day of Community Action with three leaders in the fight against book bans: Dartmouth Librarian Qiana Johnson, Union of Black Episcopalians President Rev. Kim Coleman, and Rabba Rori Picker Neiss of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs..




Marking the Freedom to Read Day of Action, this week’s episode of The State of Belief, Interfaith Alliance’s weekly radio program and podcast, features interviews with Qiana Johnson, Rev. Kim Coleman, and Rabba Rori Picker Neiss – influential leaders working at the intersection of faith and activism to combat censorship and book bans. They join host Rev. Paul Brandeis Raushenbush to discuss the critical role that religious communities can play in resisting book bans, supporting vulnerable groups like LGBTQI+ youth, and ensuring that libraries remain spaces for learning and inclusion. Each explores how faith can be a driving force for justice and community-building in the fight against censorship.

Rabba Picker Neiss detailed how censorship works to suppress diverse viewpoints. “Anytime people are uncomfortable with a book because it doesn’t reflect them, then it’s a silencing of anyone different. And fundamentally, we’re all different. And that’s the beauty that we have in this country. That’s the ethos that I think both of our organizations are working off of. That’s the strength that we can really bring.”

Qiana Johnson also emphasized how book bans can ensure that members of our communities are harmfully marginalized, making our whole society worse off. “Parts of the human story are being weaponized, and parts of the human story are being denigrated, and parts of that human story and our beauty are being hidden. And part of the community is being told that they aren’t truly part of the community, that they are dangerous parts of the community…We learn from things that are challenging, but we have to do that.”


Rev. Kim captures the urgency of taking action and being vigilant in the face of threats like book ban: “People of faith are called to be proactive, not reactive. Jesus told us to go and make disciples. We have a custom of waiting till something tragic happens before we awaken… but we don’t have to be on the defensive anymore.”

Qiana Johnson is the Associate Dean of Libraries, Collections, and Content Strategies at Dartmouth, focusing on acquisitions, discovery, access, preservation, and management of information resources. She’s also an ordained deacon in the Episcopal Church.

Rabba Rori Picker Neiss is the Senior Vice President for Community Relations at the Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA) and previously the Executive Director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of St. Louis. She has also served on the clergy team at a Modern Orthodox synagogue.

The Very Rev. Kim Coleman is the president of the Union of Black Episcopalians (UBE) and the rector of Trinity Episcopal Church in Arlington, Virginia. She leads UBE in addressing racism and advocating for Black Episcopalians, raising awareness about book bans within the Episcopal Church.

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