FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — A Florida school board is halting the use of a fictional book about a Black boy a white officer kills after a police union complained to the school district. The South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported the children’s fiction book “Ghost Boys” by Jewell Parker Rhodes was used in one fifth-grade class at an elementary school in Coral Springs, Florida, without going through the district’s vetting process. That it is anti-police “propaganda.”
A school board member said assignments related to the book were on hold. “The timing of whether to implement this subject matter must include parents and ultimately be a decision by the parents of each student,” school board member Lori Alhadeff told the newspaper. “I do not feel ‘Ghost Boys’ is appropriate for fifth graders.” Common Sense Media, a nonprofit that rates TV shows, movies, books, and other content based on children’s development, says the book is appropriate for children ten and older, the age of fifth graders.
Emmett Till, a 14-year-old boy from Chicago whose beating death in 1955, helped spur the civil rights movement. The book was published in 2018, and it is told from the point of view of a 12-year-old bullied Black boy in Chicago who was shot dead by a white police officer while playing with a toy gun, recalling the 2014 killing of Tamir Rice in Cleveland. In the wake of the killing, the ghost boy narrates how his family and the community are impacted and befriends the officer’s daughter, the only living person who can see him.
The director of the local Fraternal Order of Police, Paul Kempinski, asked Broward County School Board members in a letter to stop using the book. He wrote he was upset by the friendship between the daughter and the boy, saying he “ultimately convinces her that her father shot and killed him because her police officer father is a liar and a racist.” “Our members feel that this book is propaganda that pushes an inaccurate and absurd stereotype of police officers in America.” The book was removed from a California school district late last year, according to the National Coalition Against Censorship.
Broward County Public Schools district told the newspaper the book was “supplemental” material and could be considered by teachers who want to delve into racial and criminal justice issues. However, the district said the teachers who assigned the book did not follow the protocol of informing parents to give them a chance for their children to opt out of the assignment. It was previously used in the same school district at Pines Middle School, where a seventh-grade book club spoke via Skype with the Black author. Calling all HuffPost superfans! Sign up for membership to become a founding member and help shape HuffPost’s next chapter.