Catholic Group Initiates Parent-Led Campaign Against LGBT Books in Libraries Before Pride Month
A Catholic advocacy group, CatholicVote, is leading a parent-driven campaign to remove LGBT books from libraries before Pride Month. They encourage families to visit libraries, remove these books, and send protest letters to the library. The group aims to reclaim libraries for children by protesting against sexualized content and gender-related displays during Pride Month. The Catholic advocacy group CatholicVote is spearheading a parent-led initiative to eliminate LGBT books from libraries ahead of Pride Month. They advocate for families visiting libraries to remove such books and sending protest letters to ensure libraries are child-friendly, free from sexualized and gender-related content during the Pride Month festivities.
One of the country’s largest Catholic advocacy groups is launching an effort led by parents to root out progressive LGBT books aimed at children from libraries ahead of Pride Month, which begins Saturday.
CatholicVote, a nonprofit focused on promoting Catholic values in public life, will debut its third annual “Hide The Pride” campaign on June 1. The campaign urges parents to rid their local taxpayer-funded library’s children’s section of sexualized and gender-related books, especially those that are prominently displayed.
“Public libraries have long been a summer destination hangout where children and parents can go for free resources, books, computer access, and community. And as public spaces, they should stay that way,” CatholicVote wrote in a toolkit for parents.
“But during ‘Pride Month,’ many libraries fill their children’s sections with gay and trans books, images, and symbols – not to mention drag- queen story hours,” the group continued. “So we are equipping you to fight back and reclaim your library for your kids. We are going to ‘Hide the Pride.’”
The group is urging families to plan a library visit in early June where they go to the children’s section, take all the “Pride Month” books off the display shelves, check them out at the front desk, and go home and place the books on a shelf out of reach of children. The library books should be returned on time later, the group says.
One person should also be designated to film during the library visit in case library staff gives the group trouble, CatholicVote recommended.
CatholicVote also provides a letter template for families to sign and send to their local library to protest the “Pride Month” displays in the children’s section. The group recommended gathering at least five or six people to sign the letter and delivering it to the library through either email or snail mail.
“We plan to keep these books checked out until the library agrees to remove the inappropriate content from the shelves,” the letter template reads. “Flags, signs, and book displays based on how adults experience sexual attraction and gender identity have no place in an open and public space for children.”
Catholic Vote also urged parents to share their videos, photos, and stories to encourage others.
“It is always powerful to know you are not alone in this fight for the soul of our children,” the group said.
Over the last few years, parents across the country have vocally opposed a slew of children’s books dealing with gender ideology and sexuality — some containing pornographic content. Such books have popped up in libraries, particularly school libraries where children have access to them.
Some of the books that have raised concerns among parents are “Gender Queer,” a graphic novel with explicit sexual content, “All Boys Aren’t Blue,” which includes descriptions of anal sex and masturbation, “I Love My Colorful Nails,” about a boy whose classmates laugh at him when he paints his nails, “Ho’onani: Hula Warrior” about a Hawaiian girl who wants to lead the all-boys hula troupe at her school, and “The Hips on the Drag Queen Go Swish, Swish, Swish” by Lil Miss Hot Mess, a founder of Drag Queen Story Hour, which is a nursery rhyme book about drag shows.
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