December 2024 Newsletter

Freedom Reads: What Matters Most

Five members of the Freedom Reads team sit in front of the sign for Rayburn Correctional Center wearing Freedom Reads t-shirts.
The Freedom Reads team opened six additional Freedom Libraries at Rayburn Correctional Center in Louisiana this December.

Founder's Take

I remember my first holiday meal in prison. I’d just turned eighteen-years-old a few weeks before, my second of eight birthdays Inside. I was at Southampton Correctional Center in Capron, Virginia. There are still a lot of folks I remember who would have been in the chow hall that day, some I still talk to. Fats, Star, Divine, Smoke. That dinner, they served Cornish hens. I didn’t know what that was then but knew it was delicious. Later found out these hens are juvenile chickens particularly tender for eating. 
 
Everything is a metaphor. We all teenagers in prison, headed to a place that was supposed to consume us. We had numbers back then too, most of us. Thirty and forty and fifty years and we were young. These days I weep for who we were.
 
In a note like this, as the year ends, I feel compelled to thank people who have helped make Freedom Reads possible. And I am so tempted to make this a chorus of thank you shout outs, because I know how difficult this work is and how it is impossible without a thousand hands scraping. And still, last year this time, my friend’s mother passed and so I am thinking of him. And how when I found out I was, again, a man weeping in his hands. And my son, who was in that afterglow of Christmas, found me and held me as if I hadn’t grown beyond the years of needing to be held. Maybe we all need to be held. 
 
The wild thing is that a month or so later, my friend would call, after his mother had passed, after he’d been denied parole again, he would call me and ask if I was okay. Tells me that I’m taking on the losses as if they are mine. Such is this life, a call from a prison and a man tells you that the burdens that drown you ain’t yours, finding time to say that even as he struggles to stay afloat. 
 
It’s like the man incarcerated in Missouri, I think it was, who sent us the last thousand dollars in his account. Or the woman in California who, way back in January, sent us the equivalent of a month’s check in prison. It has become too easy for me to imagine that this work is about giving to others, when the truth is it has been filled with people giving to Freedom Reads.
 
Sometimes what they give us is word about why this work we do has mattered to them. Everyone should hear from the folks that we walk into prisons to bring Freedom Libraries. Here is a small bit of what we’ve been told:
 
From two anonymous incarcerated judges from the 2024 Inside Literary Prize:
 
One speaking of the winning book, Imani Perry’s South to America: "The man in Imani's book that had 3 life sentences. It was her father. The way he handled his incarceration was inspirational. When I'm discouraged I think about him and I'm inspired to take one more step in the right direction because even if no one sees it, it has value and it must count."
 
Another comment on being a judge: "This experience is something that I will never forget. Especially the staff and how they made me feel, like a regular human being. I'm grateful for the experience as a whole. I feel like I really needed you guys and the whole 'Freedom Reads' at that moment in my life."
 
And this from a library patron in Connecticut: "I appreciate what you’re doing for prisoners across America. I’ve been thinking a lot about when I’m released that I want to volunteer some of my time, to give back since I’ve taken so much in my life….can I volunteer for your organization? What you’re doing matters! "
 
And I think, now, what of it all? I write this on the winter solstice. This has fast become my favorite day of the year. The shortest day of the year – a reminder, I think, that all of this is fleeting. It all happens so fast. Maybe that Cornish hen wasn’t a metaphor for what we might become – maybe that day, all of us too young to imagine how much we might suffer, shared the kind of joy that would become all we needed to get us to our tomorrows. And what is Freedom Library if not that?

Reginald Dwayne Betts
Freedom Reads Founder & CEO

Freedom Reads Welcomes Three New Members to Its Board of Directors

Freedom Reads is excited to welcome Alva Greenberg, independent art curator, collector, and philanthropist; Dr. Carla Hayden, the 14th Librarian of Congress; and Anthony W. Marx, President of The New York Public Library, to our Board of Directors!

Freedom Reads Returns to Open Additional Freedom Libraries in Louisiana Prison

Five members of the Freedom Reads team sit in front of the sign for Rayburn Correctional Center wearing Freedom Reads t-shirts.
The Freedom Reads team opened six additional Freedom Libraries at Rayburn Correctional Center in Louisiana this December.

This month, the Freedom Reads team opened six additional Freedom Libraries at Rayburn Correctional Center in Louisiana. Earlier this year, the team opened 10 libraries at Rayburn.
 
To date, Freedom Reads has opened 419 Freedom Libraries across 44 adult and youth prisons in 12 states!

The Power of Books

Freedom Reads Resident Creative Writer Dempsey writes about the power of books to keep hope alive in what seem like hopeless places.

Nearing my fourth decade behind the wall, a fellow inmate asked me how I had done my time “without winding up in a straightjacket?” “At some point I viewed literature as basic equipment for life,” I replied. Books for strength, books for sustenance.

The Second Annual SPJ-PJP Stillwater Prison Journalism Awards

The Society of Professional Journalists and Prison Journalism Project are excited to solicit submissions for the Second Annual SPJ-PJP Stillwater Prison Journalism Awards. Continuing from last year, the national award will honor journalistic excellence in the incarcerated community. Learn more about the awards and submission information below.

Freedom Reads in the Media

This month, Freedom Reads Founder & CEO Reginald Dwayne Betts sat down with Connecticut Public Radio’s Dr. Khalilah Brown-Dean for a close to hour-long episode of the Disrupted podcast. The podcast also visited Freedom Reads headquarters to speak with the team about the power of literature and the Freedom Library. Dwayne also spoke in-depth with The Harvard Crimson’s Fifteen Minutes magazine about poetry, prison, and freedom.
 
Plus, read Dwayne's latest piece for The New York Times Magazine, The Lives They Lived: James Earl Jones

Why This Work Matters

Each newsletter we aim to share at least one letter (or excerpt) from one of Freedom Reads now 37,000-plus Freedom Library patrons. Freedom Reads receives many letters from the Inside. They mean so much to us. And we respond to each and every one of them.

I just want to say thank you for the wonderful book collection you have brought to the men here at CIM in Chino. I gotta say, most of the men here love the variety of books and the beautiful shelves, myself included. It gives us a sense of normalcy and of being free. The books themselves give us comfort and it's nice to know we have them at our disposal, not just limited to ten…


Johnny
, Freedom Library Patron at California Institution for Men

Our work isn’t possible without your support. Thank you for supporting us in our vision to open a Freedom Library in every cellblock in every prison in America.
 
Thanks to an anonymous donor, your gift this holiday season will be leveraged by a $100,000 matching gift!