'Little Black Book Drive' aims to uplift, improve literacy for Brevard's children with free books this Juneteenth

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Sometime, during the rough and rowdy days growing up in the housing projects of Augusta, Ga., reading became less important to me than watching cartoons, hanging out with friends, and miming pop songs.

It didn’t go unnoticed by my mother, Beatrice, who took care of children to save money so that her own Bugs Bunny-loving son could eventually go to college.

One summer, she put me on the city bus, sent me to the nearest public library, and, in a firm, mission-driven voice, told me “don’t come home without any books.”

I did what I was told.

J.D. Gallop
J.D. Gallop

I discovered Stephen King, cookbooks, religious history and music.

Reading emancipated my mind and fired up my imagination about the world outside my window. And it became one of the most important components of my life as a journalist.

So as we prepare to celebrate Juneteenth, I consider it a true blessing to work with a group of dedicated community advocates who will distribute fresh new books to hundreds of Space Coast children of all backgrounds at Juneteenth celebrations Saturday in Melbourne, Cocoa, and Mims.

Organizers of the Little Black Book Drive sort through donated books that will be given out at at three locations for Juneteenth celebrations in Melbourne, Cocoa and Mims. The group collected over 2,000 books for children and young adults. Shown are JD Gallop, criminal justice reporter at FLORIDA TODAY, and Rolanda Hatcher-Gallop, a former FLORIDA TODAY editor.

Through a three-month project dubbed “The Little Black Book Drive,” we’ve collected more than 2,300 books and reading materials such as activity and workbooks from our neighbors, friends, and supporters living in Brevard and beyond. Our hope is that the books will ignite or nurture a spark for reading in the children and provide a gateway to intellectual, and yes, financial freedom.

Mind you, this book drive came at a time when some were debating what children should read, while others in some of our communities were worried about their children being able to read.

But statistics tell the story of why reading is so important.

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Florida has a literacy rate of about 80 percent and numerous studies show a strong correlation between those who struggle to read and poverty, according to the Florida Literacy Coalition. It’s notable that Florida House Speaker Chris Sprowls, R-Piellas, backs the New Worlds Reading initiative to provide eligible children with free, new books each month. Country icon Dolly Parton is also working to inspire a love of reading with her Imagination Library providing free books to young children.

Cocoa Mayor Mike Blake (center) poses with owners and operators of the Essence of Knowledge Bookstore on King Street in Cocoa to kick off the Little Black Book Drive.
Cocoa Mayor Mike Blake (center) poses with owners and operators of the Essence of Knowledge Bookstore on King Street in Cocoa to kick off the Little Black Book Drive.

Reading better really does take a village.

Lynda Hudson, a name well known in the local community and someone with a career in media that took her from Cocoa to California, approached me back in March concerned that students weren't learning enough Black history in our public schools. She thought about a book drive.

Could it work?

I thought about the little 7-year-old I met last year at a literacy event, hair dressed in ribbons and bows. I asked what her favorite book was and she told me that she did not know how to read.

Also, I recalled the work of one of my community mentors, Sandra Pelham, a longtime community advocate who worked to help improve youth reading skills through the Connecting the Children with Reading program sponsored by the Melbourne-Palm Bay Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

Then came the name for the book drive, a play on words, and the four-month-long push with little fanfare to collect books for Brevard's children.

We asked that the books focus on Black history, science and even fictional works by authors who have fallen out of favor with our state government. To cement our mission, C.J. Harriiot at WWBC, a local on-air personality, and Sonya Mallard, the Cultural Center Coordinator of the Harry T. & Harriette V. Moore Memorial Park & Museum, joined our team to spread word about the drive. My wife Rolanda Hatcher-Gallop, who helped initiate the African-American Read-in at the Florida Institute of Technology, added her expertise.

The Little Black Book Drive will provide free books to Brevard County children during Juneteenth celebrations in Melbourne, Cocoa and Mims.
The Little Black Book Drive will provide free books to Brevard County children during Juneteenth celebrations in Melbourne, Cocoa and Mims.

Our group’s goals were simple: gather 1,000 new books through donations; practice Ujamaa (the Swahili word for cooperative economics) with donors purchasing books primarily through the Essence of Knowledge Urban Bookstore in Cocoa. We wanted children to become more familiar with Black authors and works about Black history. There are other books too, from Star Wars, the Hunger Games, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, and more.

And we did it!

The Little Black Book Drive — with help from retired teachers, parents, attorneys, politicians, medical doctors, astrophysicists, journalists, Florida Tech students, Friends of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Library, accountants and a couple of churches — achieved those goals and more.

All books will be distributed to children of all backgrounds during Juneteenth celebrations on Saturday.

Why Juneteenth? It’s a time — now a federal holiday — that celebrates that late word of freedom that came to our nation’s enslaved Blacks back in 1865.

There was a time in U.S. history when enslaved Blacks were forbidden to read, under penalty of law.

Imagine that just being able to read was considered subversive by the powers that be.

The thought of a Black child reading the story of the Exodus or the Declaration of Independence was too much for some.

This Juneteenth, the meaning of literacy, the essence of freedom, of “emancipating oneself from mental slavery” as Robert Nesta Marley would say, carries a much deeper understanding.

Thank you again, to all of our community partners for helping to make this happen. And our word to the children and youth who come out to celebrate the holiday this weekend: “Don’t leave without taking any books.”

J.D. Gallop is a Criminal Justice/Breaking News Reporter at FLORIDA TODAY. Contact Gallop at 321-917-4641 or jgallop@floridatoday.com. Twitter: @JDGallop.

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This article originally appeared on Florida Today: Juneteenth book drive aims to inspire, give free books to Brevard kids