A librarian at a Cambridge, Massachusetts, elementary school refused a donation of Dr. Seuss books. One of her reasons was that the books contain “racist propaganda.”
Then a photo emerged of the librarian, Liz Phipps Soeiro, donning a costume of the Cat in the Hat, one of Dr. Seuss’s best-known characters, during a celebration of Theodor Seuss Geisel’s birthday in 2015.
The books were a gift from first lady Melania Trump. She sent a collection to one school in each state.
“As I was thinking about your return to school, I wanted to send you a special gift. Dr. Seuss’s Oh, the Places You’ll Go! Is a book my son and I have read over and over again, and one that we want to share with all of you,” the first lady stated in her Sept. 1 letter.
“You may not be aware of this, but Dr. Seuss is a bit of a cliché, a tired and worn ambassador for children’s literature,“ wrote the librarian with a graduate degree in library science. “Another fact that many people are unaware of is that Dr. Seuss’s illustrations are steeped in racist propaganda, caricatures, and harmful stereotypes.”
She criticized the first lady for not sending the books to “underfunded and underprivileged communities” and expressed disagreement with policies of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos.
The Cambridge school system stated Soeiro’s letter doesn’t represent the district.
Melania Trump is only the last in a lineup of first ladies who have read Dr. Seuss’s books to children.
Theodor Seuss Geisel, a lifelong liberal, included political satire in his children’s books, highlighting freedom and imagination and criticizing oppression, anti-Semitism, and even destruction of the environment.
The home of Harvard and MIT, Cambridge is a strongly left-leaning city of some 110,000. Last year it went 88 percent for Hillary Clinton.