Category Archives: Harry Potter

A post of mine is referenced on Wikipedia!!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_debates_over_the_Harry_Potter_series

    Hey! I have recently discovered that one of my older posts about Harry Potter is referenced on Wikipedia. Check out reference #61 at the bottom!! Woot Woot!

    I am reminded of the scene from the movie, The Jerk, when Navin Johnson (Steve Martin) got excited when he found his name in the phone book…….O.k., maybe I am not THAT excited about the mention in Wikipedia.

Enough with the Harry Potter spoilers already!

   What is the appeal of Harry Potter spoilers?!?! Isn’t this like the obnoxious person who shouts out what’s going to happen next in a movie theatre?

    I don’t want to be told. I don’t want to see a summary of what happens. At this point, I don’t think I even want to speculate. I am old school. I love books. I love reading. I dig the information age, e-mail, blogging, et al. However, I like the reading experience. Lying/Laying in bed (I never got this verb down. I don’t know if I am reclining or distorting the truth) while reading is great, especially while it’s cold and raining outside.

    I do have the new book, but am waiting until it’s my turn to read it. I have no idea how it turns out, but would like to discover that on my own.

Harry Potter might get kicked out of the library

Hearing to determine fate of ‘Harry Potter’ books in GCPS

By Rubina Madan
Loganville mother of four Laura Mallory would like for the county to take the Harry Potter book series off schools’ library shel 
 Loganville mother of four Laura Mallory would like for the county to take the Harry Potter book series off schools’ library shelves

rubina.madan@gwinnettdailypost.com
 

LAWRENCEVILLE — The next challenge Harry Potter will face has nothing to do with horcruxes, Hogwart’s or the half-blood prince. Instead, it will be a group of concerned parents looking to take the series off the shelves of all Gwinnett County Public Schools.

Laura Mallory of Loganville filed an appeal last week to get the best-selling book series out of the schools’ media centers. She is an evangelical Christian who has three children at J.C. Magill Elementary School.

“I think the anti-Christian bias — it’s just got to stop,” Mallory said. “And if we don’t say something, we’ll just keep getting pushed out of the schools. And I pay taxes, too, and I think that gives me a voice to speak out about this.”

On Thursday, she will present her appeal at a public hearing at 2 p.m. Many parents and other community members are expected to attend to support or oppose Harry Potter’s place in Gwinnett schools. A hearing officer will listen to all of the testimony and submit recommendations to the Gwinnett Board of Education. The board will have to make its final decision within 15 days of the hearing.

Mallory wrote on her appeal forms that she was objecting to the books because of their “evil themes, witchcraft, demonic activity, murder, evil blood sacrifice, spells and teaching children all of this.”

The mother of four said she was opposed to the messages of the books, which describe a young wizard’s adventures in a school of magic. She said she had done much of her research online, reading a variety of Christian message boards and Harry Potter fan sites.

Their thinking has changed. They’re designed to think that witches and witchcraft and wizards and all this is just normal. And that it’s OK. And that it’s even good. I strongly disagree with that. I don’t think it’s OK, and I don’t think it’s good at all,” Mallory said.

The appeal has brought international attention to Gwinnett County schools, as news of the possible banning of the book series circulated around the Internet this past week.

Book appeals have been fairly rare in the Gwinnett school system. The most recent challenges were in 1997, when complainants asked the Board of Education to remove “Ghost Camp” by R.L. Stein and “It’s Not the End of the World” by Judy Blume, according to Sloan Roach, spokeswoman for Gwinnett County Public Schools.

In both cases, committees recommended the board take no action, allowing the books to stay on the shelves. The school board upheld those decisions.
“Since we will be ultimately making a decision, it probably is premature to say anything for or against the books until the information is brought before us,” said Carole Boyce, the Board of Education’s District I representative.

Many Gwinnett Harry Potter fans, including students and parents, were shocked when they heard about the possibility of the books being taken off school shelves.

Jessica Grimes, a 10-year-old student at Duncan Creek Elementary School, faxed a letter to the school system in support of the books series.
“The books never at any time turned me into a wizard or witch,” Grimes said. “I go to church every Sunday, go to Sunday school and never at any time did I think the books are true.”

Michelle Carter, the PTA president at Magill, also has three children at the school. She said she was undecided as to whether or not the series should be available in schools, but was confident about the final decision.

“I’m glad that parents in Gwinnett County schools are able to express their opinions and be heard, and I believe the Board of Education will hear all sides and make the correct decision,” Carter said.
Dacula High School student Jana Davis, 16, said she will probably attend the public hearing with some fellow Harry Potter fans. She said she didn’t see how the books were any worse than other children’s books like Roald Dahl’s “James and the Giant Peach” or Lemony Snicket’s “A Series of Unfortunate Events” series.

“Maybe parents should be parents and read the book first,” Davis said. “If they find it fun, exciting and adventurous, like thousands of people across the world, then they should allow their children to read it, in school or out.”

Mallory said she has been contacted by other Christian parents who were concerned about the content of the books. On her complaint form, she suggested they be replaced by C.S. Lewis’s “Chronicles of Narnia” series or Tim LaHaye’s “Left Behind: the Kids” series.

She admitted that she has not read the book series partially because “they’re really very long and I have four kids.”

“I’ve put a lot of work into what I’ve studied and read. I think it would be hypocritical for me to read all the books, honestly. I don’t agree with what’s in them. I don’t have to read an entire pornographic magazine to know it’s obscene,” Mallory said.

What can we get from this article?

1) You don’t have to read a book to determine if it should be banned/recommended.

2) 10 year olds can discern reality from fantasy, unlike some of their adult counterparts

3) There is no possible way that on-line research is flawed. Anything pulled from the Internet is automatically factual. Christian messageboards are also not likely to offer any agenda to something like this topic either.

4) Although Harry Potter books make no reference to Gerald Gardner, the Great Rite, Sabbats, various rituals, reference on how to collect and prepare tools, Demeter/Persephone or Kore or any other Gods or Goddesses; it is a handbook for all things Wicca.

Blog author’s note: Please, people. If you are going to have an opinion on this, please read at least one of the series. Credibility is given by doing your own REAL research, not taking others opinion as fact.

Top 10 Surprises waiting for us in the last Harry Potter book

10) Hogwarts test scores go up after LEAVE NO WIZARD BEHIND legislation passes
9) Death Eaters refuse to give back gifts after being linked to Abramoff
8) Half-Blood Prince asks to now be referenced by a unpronounceable symbol
7) Muggles are allowed to unionize at the local Wal*Mart
6) Voldemort meets Dick Cheney at the annual family reunion
5) Hermione enlists the ACLU in her fight for the rights of House Elves
4) Alberto Gonzales is the new Defense Against The Dark Arts teacher
3) Federal workers replace private security firms for searching people before they apparate
2) Congress to investigate the use of Dementors at Guantanamo Bay
1) 4 Remaining horcruxes turn up on E-bay