When the school district of Waterloo, Iowa, withdrew from the stateโ€™s 19th annual African American Read-In over fears it would lose federal funding, author Nikole Hannah-Jones jumped into action.

Hannah-Jones, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The 1619 Project author and a Waterloo native, held her own read-in last weekend featuring authors Jacqueline Woodson, Derrick Barnes, and Tami Charles. Jason Reynolds appeared via video.

Charlesโ€™ All Because You Matter was featured in the state-wide read-in hosted by the University of Northern Iowa and joined virtually by first graders from schools across Iowa. But the Waterloo districtโ€™s legal team advised them to withdraw, citing federal directives that condemn diversity, equity, and inclusion

Hannah-Jones spoke to local news KWWL about the climate of fear created by vague laws and executive orders targeting diversity, equity, and inclusion.

โ€œI think we as Iowans really have to decide: Who are we? Who are we as a community, and do we really want to be the type of state or the type of nation that bans books?โ€ she said. โ€œFree societies donโ€™t do that.โ€

Iowa had the second-highest number of book bans during the 2023-2024 school year with more than 3,600 instances of book bans. Iowaโ€™s SF 496, which took effect in July 2023, requires all materials to be โ€œage-appropriate,โ€ which it says excludes any description or depiction of a โ€œsex act.โ€ The law also contains โ€œDonโ€™t Say Gayโ€ copycat provisions that prohibit discussions of LGBTQ+ identities in the classroom. 

Hundreds of students and parents attended the Waterloo read-in, organized by Hannah-Jonesโ€™ 1619 Freedom School and co-sponsored by PEN America with Annieโ€™s Foundation, Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster, Veridian Credit Union, Believe Waterloo, Antioch Baptist Church, Community Foundation NE Iowa, and the University of Northern Iowa Jacobson Center for Comprehensive LIteracy.

Barnes also read his picture book I Am Every Good Thing and Woodson read The Day You Begin. Hannah-Jonesโ€™ 1619 Freedom School, an afterschool literacy program, handed out more than 3,000 books.

The Waterloo school district has the highest percentage of Black public school enrollment in Iowa, with 27% of students identifying as Black. 

PEN Americaโ€™s Sabrina Adams attended the event and said that the school districtโ€™s move to withdraw from the read-in removes โ€œthe opportunity to engage with other students and fundamentally deprives them of cultural belonging.โ€