Civic Life

Amid Book Bans, Muslim Authors, Parents Advocate for Children’s Books Representing Islam

February 21, 2022

(RNS) — When in September 2021, Pennsylvania’s Central York School District banned “The Arabic Quilt,” Aya Khalil’s award-winning debut picture book about fitting in at school, Khalil decided to write a book about her experience. “The Banned Books Bake Sale,” due out in spring of 2023, is about a young woman who fights a ban at her school by telling about experiences in the Egyptian “Arab Spring” revolution of 2011.

The experience also prompted Khalil to redouble her support of Kidlit in Color, a group of children’s book authors who are trying to create more diversity in children’s literature.

With the rise in book bans across the country, purportedly aimed at suppressing the teaching of critical race theory and other anti-racist ideas, books for and about Muslims, already rare in school libraries and curriculums, are increasingly being put out of reach for young readers.

When Khalil helped to launch Kidlit in Color in 2019, the group’s primary focus was to shift attitudes toward diversity in the publishing industry. “I started Kidlit in Color because I wanted to be part of a group of BIPOC authors who shared the struggle of the publishing world but also the struggles of being from a marginalized community in the publishing world,” Khalil explains.

Some of the authors highlighted on Kidlit in Color. Screengrab

Some of the authors highlighted on Kidlit in Color. Screengrab

Author Aya Khalil. Courtesy photo

Author Aya Khalil. Courtesy photo

Photo by Susan Q Yin/Unsplash/Creative Commons

Photo by Susan Q Yin/Unsplash/Creative Commons

Author Hajera Memon. Photo courtesy of Shade 7 Publishing

Author Hajera Memon. Photo courtesy of Shade 7 Publishing

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