CHOWCHILLA – The national non-profit Freedom Reads has partnered with California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) to open Freedom Libraries at Valley State Prison (VSP) and Central California Women’s Facility (CCWF) in Chowchilla, Calif.
A carefully curated, 500-book collection will be available at each institution. Mini portable libraries are in each of VSP’s 17 housing units. Staff may also use the books.
Each bookshelf is handcrafted out of maple, walnut or cherry and is curved to contrast the straight lines and bars of prisons as well as to evoke Martin Luther King Jr.’s line about the “arc of the universe” bending “toward justice.”
MacArthur Fellow and Yale Law School graduate Reginald Dwayne Betts founded Freedom Libraries in 2021. Betts was sentenced to nine years in prison at age 16. The Freedom Libraries seek to create a space in prisons to encourage community. Along with that, they foster environments where reaching for a book can be as spontaneous as human curiosity.
(Learn more about Freedom Libraries.)
“Far too often, the only thing that’s beautiful in a prison are the people,” said Betts, Founder and Executive Director of Freedom Reads. “With the opening of these libraries in VSP and CCWF we are bringing beauty, bringing books and bringing people inside to have the kinds of conversations we believe could help transform the lives of those incarcerated. We are thankful to share our goal of creating opportunities for daily engagement with literature inside their facilities.”
Freedom Libraries in line with rehabilitation
Brandy Buenafe, Library Services Administrator for CDCR, said she’s eager to see the new books circulating at the institutions. “Reading is a step toward rehabilitation, and can create deep personal change in anyone who embraces it. Books and knowledge are irreplaceable and can lead to successful outcomes,” Buenafe said. “We would like to thank Freedom Reads and Dwayne Betts for bringing these libraries to our prisons, and offering the gift to our incarcerated population that comes with reading.”
VSP and CCWF offer a host of rehabilitative programs, including Freedom Reads. The libraries are part of CDCR’s commitment to providing opportunities for academic growth at all its institutions. As a result, last year, VSP and CCWF began offering a bachelor’s degree program through Fresno State University.
“Valley State Prison’s goal is to empower the incarcerated population through literacy and education,” said Acting Warden Matt McVay. “Freedom Reads’ donation will be an invaluable addition to the rehabilitative and life-changing materials and programs available to those at VSP.”
Freedom Libraries were a labor of love and expertise
Betts’ nonprofit is a first-of-its-kind organization that empowers people through literature to imagine new possibilities for their lives. Hundreds of poets, novelists, philosophers, teachers, friends and voracious readers consulted on books in the Freedom Library. The libraries include contemporary poets, novelists, and essayists. They also feature classic works from Homer’s The Odyssey to the Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, titles that remind us the book has long been a freedom project. Freedom Reads is working to put a Freedom Library within reach of every person incarcerated in this country.
Following the openings of the libraries, Betts on Jan. 19 will perform for an audience at VSP and CCWF his one-man show Felon: An American Washi Tale. In this show he explores the lingering consequences of having a criminal record, fatherhood, the power of literature, and love. The show is based on Betts’ poetry collection Felon.
VSP is a low-security, general population institution open since 1995, and was converted from an all-female to an all-male institution in 2013. CCWF opened in 1990 and is the largest female institution in the state.
About Freedom Reads
Freedom Reads works to empower people through literature to confront what prison does to the spirit. Supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and inspired by the recognition that freedom begins with a book, Freedom Reads supports the efforts of people in prison to transform their lives through increased access to books and writers. For more information about Freedom Reads and the Freedom Libraries project please visit https://freedomreads.org/ .
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Contact: Terri Hardy at terri.hardy@cdcr.ca.gov or Megan Stencel at megan@javelindc.com or (703)-490-8845.