Ga.
board: Harry Potter books can stay
GREG
BLUESTEIN
Associated Press
ATLANTA
- The Georgia Board of Education voted Thursday to uphold a local school board's
decision to leave Harry Potter books on library shelves despite a mother's objections.
The
board members voted without discussion to back the Gwinnett County school board's
decision to deny Laura Mallory's request to remove the best-selling books.
Mallory,
who has three children in elementary school, has worked for more than a year to
ban the books from Gwinnett schools, claiming the popular fiction series is an
attempt to indoctrinate children in witchcraft.
"It's
mainstreaming witchcraft in a subtle and deceptive manner, in a children-friendly
format," said Mallory, who is considering a legal challenge of the board's
ruling. "The kind of stuff in these books - murder and greed and violence.
Why do they have to read them in school?"
Gwinnett
school officials have argued that the books are good tools to encourage children
to read and to spark creativity and imagination. Banning all books with references
to witchcraft would mean classics such as "Macbeth" and "Cinderella"
would have to go, they said.
J.K.
Rowling's Harry Potter books, published by London-based Bloomsbury Publishing
PLC, have been challenged 115 times since 2000, making them the most challenged
texts of the 21st Century, according to the American Library Association.
The
challenges most often claim that the series encourages children to question adult
authority and promotes witchcraft, said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, the deputy director
for the association's Office for Intellectual Freedom.