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Banned Books Festival

Unstoppable Stories Banned Book Festival - 2025

Celebrate banned books.

     Celebrate diverse voices.

 Celebrate freedom.

Sun, Sept 28, 2025
10:30 AM-2:30 PM

Book bans are on the rise, silencing voices and stripping diverse stories from our shelves. At Cedar Lane, we know stories matter—they help us see through another’s eyes, care more deeply, and keep democracy strong.

Join us on Sunday, September 28, 2025 for the Banned Books Festival as we celebrate the authors, readers, and advocates who refuse to be silenced. 

From family activities to a powerful worship service with Rep. Jamie Raskin and a dynamic author panel, this festival lifts up the freedom to read and the right to be heard.

Worship Service

Defending Democracy: Let Every Story Be Heard — with Rep. Jamie Raskin

We celebrate the freedom to read and the power of diverse voices, honoring authors, librarians, educators, and students on the front lines. Join us for music and reflection, and renew your commitment to a democracy where every voice counts and every story is heard.

Join us in-person or online.

About Rep. Jamie Raskin

Rep. Raskin represents Maryland’s 8th District in the U.S. House. A constitutional law professor for more than 25 years at American University’s Washington College of Law, he is a nationally recognized advocate for democracy, civil rights, and free expression. He served as lead House manager in the second impeachment trial of President Donald Trump and is the author of the bestseller Unthinkable: Trauma, Truth, and the Trials of American Democracy.

Drag King Story Hour

Children and Youth Programming 

Join us for a dynamic, age-appropriate program designed to spark imagination, celebrate creativity, and honor the power of stories!

Our morning begins together in the Sanctuary at 10:30 AM, where everyone will hear a story about resistance movements from around the world.

Then, children and youth will move into the Chapel for an unforgettable Drag King Storytime featuring award-winning Drag King Ricky Rosé.

After Storytime, kids and teens will dive into literacy and social justice activities tailored to their age group:

✨ Pre-K & Kindergarten – Create book-inspired crafts and share your own story! Younger children will tell their tale to an older youth “scribe” and then bring it to life with illustrations.

📚 1st–2nd Grade – Make your own social justice comic book, guided by materials from Matthew Cressler author of the webcomic Bad Catholics, Good Trouble.

✍️ 3rd–5th Grade – Meet acclaimed children’s author Fred Bowen (Off the BenchGridiron) and join him in conversation about sports, storytelling, and what it means when books are banned.

🌟 6th–12th Grade – Take action with hands-on service projects, including creating zines and decorating umbrellas with messages of freedom and justice. (Service hours available.)

This program blends fun, creativity, and justice-centered learning—empowering young people to find their voices, share their stories, and stand up for the freedom to read.

Coffee Hour

Stay after the service for coffee, tea, and light refreshments.

Enjoy our bright social hall, and outdoor deck surrounded by trees and nature.

coffee

Author Panel

Unstoppable Voices

Celebrate the authors who bring us diverse, challenging, and necessary stories that censorship seeks to silence.

Panelists

Lakita Wilson – Author of What Is Black Lives Matter? and Be Real, Macy Weaver, and 2017 SCBWI Emerging Voices Award recipient.

Wendy Wan-Long Shang – Award-winning author of The Great Wall of Lucy Wu, The Secret Battle of Evan Pao, and 2022 American Girl books featuring Corinne.

JB Aris – Baltimore-based writer, actor, director, and performance artist, author of Spellwork for the Modern Pastel Witch.

Moderator

Madelyn Rosenberg – Author of more than a dozen books, including The Schmutzy Family and One Small Hop, and co-author of Not Your All-American Girl.

Sliding Scale Options

suggested love offering of $20 / seat

Sliding Scale Guide

We know it can be complicated to decide how much to pay, and there’s no one right answer for anyone. Many thanks to UU@UN for providing an equitable model for payments.

Consider paying at a lower tier if many of these are true for you:

  • I am directly affected by environmental racism.
  • I have immigration-related expenses.
  • I’m supporting children or have other dependents.
  • I have significant debt.
  • I have medical expenses not covered by insurance.
  • I receive public assistance.
  • I am an elder with limited financial support.
  • I am an unpaid community organizer.
  • I have been denied work due to incarceration history.
  • I would need to budget in order to afford a $25 expense.

Consider paying at a higher tier if multiple of these are true for you:

  • I or my family owns the home I live in.
  • I have investments, retirement accounts, or inherited money.
  • I can travel recreationally.
  • I have access to family money and resources in times of need.
  • I work part time by choice.
  • I have a relatively high degree of earning power due to level of education, gender and racial privilege, class background, etc.
  • In terms of its impact on my lifestyle (e.g. my ability to pay this month’s bills), $50 means functionally about the same as $15. My bank account would look pretty much the same either way.


A reflection from Pronoia Coaching:

When I pay more, I know that I am helping others to access the event.

When I pay in the middle, I know I am helping the organizers cover costs.

And when I pay less, I know I am letting my community hold me and support me.

All of these are wonderful and acceptable ways of participating.