Free Speech Groups Criticize Court Decision in Book Banning Case

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The American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE) has joined with the National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) and the Freedom to Read Foundation (FTRF) in criticizing a decision by the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals upholding the Miami-Dade County School Board's banning of the children's picture book Vamos a Cuba. The free expression groups had filed an amicus brief urging the appeals court to uphold a federal district court decision that ordered the book back into Miami school libraries.

Last week, in a 2 - 1 decision, the appeals court declared that the school board had the right to ban the book, which is intended for four-to-eight year-olds, because it omitted such facts as "[t]he people of Cuba survive without civil liberties," "it [is] a crime to exercise private initiative or to have private practice of a profession," "[p]ractically everyone must work for the government," and "[r]efusal to do agricultural work may result in expulsion from school."

Noting that the appeals court decision sets a dangerous precedent, ABFFE President Chris Finan said in a statement, "The 11th circuit has given the green light to school authorities to purge their libraries of books that they don't like by claiming that they are not factual."

Joan Bertin, executive director of NCAC, added that "the decision departs from settled First Amendment principles by allowing political views to control educational decisions. Specifically, the board rejected the book, calling it 'inaccurate,' because it failed to criticize the Cuban government." The court went so far as to find as matter of fact "that the people of Cuba live in a state of subjugation to a totalitarian communist regime with all that involves."

ABFFE noted that the court accepted as "fact" the testimony of anti-Castro board members, much of it drawn from personal experiences, because, according to the court, "factual inaccuracy in a non-fiction book is not a 'matter of opinion.'" However, Judith F. Krug, FTRF executive director, said in a statement: "There can be, and usually is, more than one interpretation of historical events, and this is undeniably true of differing accounts of the realities of life in Cuba. The board's effort to suppress an interpretation at odds with its own is classic censorship."

The Miami case began in 2006 when a former Cuban political prisoner complained that Vamos a Cuba, a 32-page picture book with just 603 words, is "untruthful" because it "portray[ed] a life in Cuba that does not exist." Two panels of educators reviewed the book and upheld its use in school libraries by an overwhelming vote, and the superintendent of schools urged the school board to retain the book. However, the school board banned it by a 6 - 3 vote. ABFFE noted that several board members had acknowledged that they voted to remove the book because by failing to include detailed facts about Cuba's dictatorship it was "offensive" to the Cuban American community.

ACLU of Florida challenged the ban, and a federal district court judge in Miami declared it unconstitutional because the board's decision was driven by hostility to the views expressed in the book, particularly the failure to condemn the Cuban government and the conditions of life in the country. The decision was reversed by the appeals court.

According to ABFFE, the ACLU of Florida has indicated that it will appeal the decision. It can either request all of the judges on the appeals court to review the decision or seek U.S. Supreme Court review.

The amicus brief filed by ABFFE, NCAC, and FTRF was joined by the Association of Booksellers for Children, Reforma, and Peacefire.org.