A Chilliwack school trustee reading out a steamy passage from a young adult novel didn鈥檛 help pass her motion that would have required parents to have informed consent on all materials used in the classroom.
Trustee Heather Maahs read from Australian author John Marsden鈥檚 1993 book Tomorrow, When the War Began, about a teenage girl living through an insurgence by an unnamed country.
鈥溾橧 was clinging to him and pressing against him as though I wanted to let my whole body inside him and I liked the way I could make him groan and grasp and swear [the novel actually says 鈥榮weat鈥橾,鈥欌 Maahs read aloud at a meeting Tuesday night.
鈥溾業 liked giving him pleasure, although it was hard to tell what was pleasure and what was pain. I was teasing him, touching him and saying 鈥淒oes that hurt? Does that? Does that?鈥 and he was panting saying 鈥淥h God 鈥 no, yes, no.鈥 It made me feel powerful.鈥欌
The excerpt is from a Grade 9 novel, in which the main character explains that she and her love interest, and most of their friends, are virgins.
The motion, which failed 4-3, would have required teachers to foresee 鈥渞esources that some may consider controversial鈥 and inform parents about their use. It does not explicitly target sexual content, but Maahs emphasized that point at the meeting.
鈥淚 think we can all figure out that I鈥檓 talking about sexual content in the curriculum 鈥 I am talking about SOGI 123, but I鈥檓 also talking about novels and anything that may arrive in a sexual nature,鈥 Maahs said, referring to the sexual orientation and gender identity curriculum in B.C.
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School board chair Dan Coulter noted several reasons the motion should fail, including contravention of the School Act and that it was reminiscent of book banning and book burning.
鈥淧eople would be objecting to phrases in books in libraries,鈥 Coulter said, adding books on biology could be deemed controversial by some parents. 鈥淚t would be endless. This is Alabama time, and we should stay away from it.鈥
Other trustees said parents can already speak to their children鈥檚 teachers about content used in a classroom. Maahs, however, said her motion would allow parents the opt their child out of conversations before they happen.
A book-banning case happened closer to home than Alabama. About 20 years ago, the Surrey School Board tried ban three children鈥檚 books: Belinda鈥檚 Bouquet, Asha鈥檚 Mums, and One Dad, Two Dads, Brown Dads, Blue Dads. The Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the ban breached the School Act.
Marsden鈥檚 book and its series has earned accolades internationally, including the Children鈥檚 Book Council of Australia, the New South Wales Board of Studies, and the American Library Association, among others.
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jpeters@theprogress.com
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