September 2025 Newsletter
Freedom Reads: Remembering Through Stories
Far too many stories I tell about someone else end up becoming stories I tell about someone allowing me to see myself truer. It’s the tragedy of going to prison as a sixteen-year-old, long before I’d had the experiences or sense of knowing who I was. And still, some of the stories become the best ways to remember the people. When I met Aggie Gund, I was running late. I’d been invited by Elizabeth Alexander to meet with Aggie and a group of others about the beginning of Art for Justice.
Walking in the apartment, I found myself looking around for where others might be. I wasn’t completely sure I was in the right place. I saw a William Kentridge charcoal drawing of ravens and crows. Years later, I’d get those birds tattoo’d on the inside of my right arm, and so maybe that image was my first gift. I’d known little of Aggie’s life. Had no idea of her years as head of the Museum of Modern Art, knew little of her life as an art collector, didn’t know that she’d sold a Lichtenstein’s Masterpiece and used $100 million dollars from the sale to fund artists aiming to achieve long needed justice in this world.
I was collaborating with my friend Titus Kaphar on what would become the Redaction Project. I was asked to talk about the intersection between art & advocacy. As would become Aggie’s pattern, she had me sit next to her at the head of the largest table I’d seen in my life. And I started talking. Fifteen, twenty minutes straight. When I finished, Aggie said, “Dwayne, you talk really fast.” And I laughed.
Someone tells you the truth about yourself and if you laugh, you know they are more generous, maybe, than you deserve in that moment. In the years that followed, I’d run into Aggie every so often. And two instances stand out for me. One was a dinner party. Again I was sitting next to her. There, at the table setting, was a gift wrapped book for all who’d been invited. Mine was Edmund De Waal’s Letters to Camondo. All these years later, I only realize the cover is of a man holding a dog. Fitting for me, given that in a lot of ways getting a dog during the pandemic and making friends with dogs saved my life. Fitting too, as the book gave me my favorite word, petrichor, the smell of the earth after the rain.
The last time I saw Aggie was at the MoMA Gala at PS1. I had brought a copy of Doggerel. I’d only come because I was her guest. Still, when I saw her, and all of her friends were taking turns talking and greeting her, I felt conspicuous. Still, I approached. She opened Doggerel and starting reading the book right then. (After she told me the cover art was beautiful!) Nobody starts reading poetry in a room filled with people who want to speak with them. At the dinner table, Aggie and I talked in whispers as if no one else was around. I told her how sometimes it hurt me to leave home, being a single father these days, and the leaving often requiring me to leave my sons to fend for themselves. She told me of her own early parenting days, and for minutes we talked as if we were the only two people in the room.
That night, I likely talked fast as well. Wanting to get it all in. That night, she likely asked me to slow down, as I leaned close to her and shouted whispers. That night, as usual, she made me feel like I belonged in a moment that I might not have – not by pandering, not by listening when she didn’t care, but by carving out space, even in a crowded room, to hear the racing voice that accompanied my racing mind.
A little bit ago, I reached out to Aggie and asked if she’d be an Executive Producer on March Forth, a documentary film that I’ve been creating with Robe Imbriano and Valerie Hong about my life and our work at Freedom Reads. She agreed and I’m reminded that one of the treasures we can give another is to help them tell their story. Sometimes you do that by just listening, sometimes you do it by adding your name to a story that matters.
These days, I am one that weeps often, so it wasn’t a surprise to find tears in my eyes when I learned she’d passed. Still, it’s surprising to find myself crying still, days later. She was a cool lady is really the only point of all this. One of the best of us. And writing it reminds me, actually, that telling the stories isn’t just how we avoid forgetting, but how we ensure that none of us ever disappears.
Reginald Dwayne Betts
Freedom Reads Founder & CEO
The national non-profit Freedom Reads announced today the opening of 5 Freedom Libraries at Camden County Juvenile Detention Center, Lakeland Campus, outside Blackwood, New Jersey. Freedom Reads has previously opened 46 Freedom Libraries in New Jersey, 9 at the Garden State Youth Facility, 27 at Northern State Prison, a men’s prison, and 10 at Edna Mahan Correctional Facility, a women’s prison.
Watch the remarks of Dwayne Betts, Freedom Reads Founder & CEO, at Planet Word here.
The Freedom Reads team traveled to Washington D.C. to visit the Planet Word Museum and celebrate our 500th Freedom Library opening. As our team drove down the streets of DC, we realized just how close we were to the Building Museum, where in 2022 we celebrated the building of our first Freedom Library. Back then, 500 Freedom Libraries wasn’t even a dream.
By Dempsey, Resident Creative Writer, Freedom Reads
Believe me when I tell you, there cannot be anything more different, more distant, more everything than the difference between the infamous Attica state prison in upstate New York and Malta, the small, sunny island nation in the Mediterranean Sea. Before I had the good fortune of traveling to Malta, I was serving a life sentence for murder behind the gloomy concrete walls of Attica state prison – a place where time seemed under arrest and clouds appeared grey and in mourning for those inside. The prison is infamous, not just for its brutally dismal appearance, but for its wildly violent history. Tension often hung in the air like the echo of screams.Time was marked by the industrial sound of steel doors and gates banging and clanging shut. I was desperate for freedom, for Attica didn’t just cage my body, it sought to cage my spirit and entomb it into eternity.
At Freedom Reads, no two days look alike—and no one knows that better than Tyler Sperrazza, Chief of Production Officer of Library Division. Tyler is at the heart of the work that brings Freedom Libraries into prisons across the country.
“I wouldn’t call any day at Freedom Reads typical and that’s one of the reasons I love this work so much.”
This September, our Freedom Library opening in Camden County received coverage from a range of media outlets and institutions, including South Jersey Media, NJ Pen, Camden County, the New Jersey Department of Corrections, and radio station 95.9 The Rat.
Also, last August's 500th Freedom Library opening was also featured by CT Public.
In addition, one of our former interns, Maddie Westall, reflected on her summer experience with Freedom Reads in a piece published by Yale University's Tsai City.
We’re excited to introduce four incredible additions to the Freedom Reads team:
Ben Bruce has come on board as our Chief Financial Officer (CFO). Ben brings more than two decades of experience in finance and strategy, including leadership roles at Yale Divinity School, Yale School of Management, and in the private sector across Washington, D.C., London, and Stamford. Outside of work, he’s active in his community, volunteers with local nonprofits, and loves exploring New England’s trails with his family.
James Davis III joins us as a Communications Associate. James spent 25 years in prison, where he earned degrees from Middlesex Community College and Wesleyan University, co-authored a book, and published academic papers. Having lived in a cellblock with a Freedom Reads library, he knows firsthand the transformative impact of books behind bars and is grateful to help bring that opportunity to others.
Autumn Gordon-Chow joins us as Senior Communications Associate. Autumn holds a Master’s in Public Administration with a graduate certificate in Nonprofit Management and brings more than a decade of experience leading communications and program initiatives that amplify voices and foster connection. Her love for literature and the performing arts fuels her creativity and belief in the power of storytelling to spark empathy and understanding. In her hometown of Wethersfield, she co-founded a community social justice group dedicated to dialogue, belonging, and collective action.
Craig L. Gore also joins us as a Communications Associate and member of our Library Division. A New Haven native, Craig is the founder of The Critical X-Change, a creative and performing arts program for young people. As a returning citizen, he draws on his lived experience to highlight the transformative power of literacy and storytelling. He’s honored to bring his passion and perspective to advancing our mission.
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'm facing the prospect of parole release under the juvenile laws for July 2025; and my anxiety level is high. I read to think and explore and even time-travel through books. I'm also reading to adjust psychologically to today's world. And I'm not prepared for it. Of this, I'm aware.
Thank you to the hands that made the bookshelves. To the author who wrote each book. This is proof no matter where one person is in life, love wins.