Tag Archives: censorship

Celebrate Freedom to Read Week 2026

Photo of a young girl reading a book with a red cover; there are blue birds flying around her head. Photo by TyliJura via Pixabay.
Photo by TyliJura on Pixabay

The upcoming Freedom to Read Week runs from February 22 to February 28, 2026, marking its 42nd anniversary. Founded in 1984, this initiative helps highlight the importance of intellectual freedom and being able to access books and materials that are free from restrictions. According to their “Freedom to Read Week” webpage, they note that “Canada also has a long-standing tradition of censorship,”  signifying how crucial it is to raise awareness and challenge censorship.

To celebrate Freedom to Read Week, I’ll be putting together a short list of banned and challenged books to exemplify what kind of challenges have been raised for books in the past.

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Celebrate Freedom to Read Week 2025

This year, from February 23 to March 1, Canada will once again celebrate Freedom to Read Week in libraries across the nation.  Led by a few library steering organizations, this annual event encourages Canadians to think about and reaffirm their commitment to all expressions of intellectual freedom. Or in other words, the ability to access information and material without restrictions, something that libraries have always prided themselves on being able to provide to our communities.

While celebrating Freedom to Read Week has always been important, even before it’s official inception in 1984, it certainly has hit differently as we’ve come into the 2020s.  Reports of an exponential rise in book challenges and bans have been flooding in from the United States over the last few years, and Canada has not been immune.   According to this article on the FtRW site, in the 2022-2023 period book challenges in Canada went up from 46 and 55 the previous years to 118.  More than double the previous year, and that was only what was reported. These targeted books are labeled as ‘dangerous’, ‘obscene’, ‘harmful’, and other choice words. Certain people and groups have taken it upon themselves to keep books out of reach, driven by that person or group’s own sense of what is right, what is wrong and what is factual.

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Freedom to Read Week 2021

Book Cover of George by Alex GinoThis year’s Freedom to Read week kicks off tomorrow, February 21, so let’s celebrate our freedom to read by exploring books that have been challenged or banned, contested in some way! Every year, Freedom to Read week and Banned Books Week (in the fall) roll around and we’re prompted to talk about why it’s important to have the freedom to access all sorts of different books, whether they agree with our point of view or not. We might think that banned or contested books would probably be extreme in their content, but in fact, most of us will definitely recognize one of consistently contested or banned books/series: Harry Potter. Yes, Harry has been being hunted down not just by Voldemort, but also by members of the general public. Apparently it’s been contested since the series came out, mostly for religious reasons – luring kids into practicing witchcraft! – but can you imagine a world where Harry Potter was successfully banned? Where we’d have had to as kids to exchange contraband Potter books in order to get our hands on the latest release, if at all? Actually, I can imagine that kind of world, especially since 2020 gave us, among other things, the national security law in Hong Kong, not to mention earlier this year, Hungary made LGBTQIA+ disclaimers mandatory on children’s books. So it’s a good time to pause and not take for granted our freedom to read.

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