Posts Tagged we need diverse middle grade

WNDMG Wednesday – Meet Our New Contributors

We Need Diverse MG Logo hands holding reading globe with stars and spirals floating around
We Need Diverse MG Logo hands holding reading globe with stars and spirals floating around

Illustration by: Aixa Perez-Prado

Meet our New Contributors

At WNDMG Wednesday, we have great news: We’ve added three new exciting voices to the WNDMG team. Each of these amazing writers will bring a thoughtful presence to our mission to center, uplift, and celebrate diverse voices. We’re so excited for you to meet our new contributors!

Welcome to the Team

Kelly Garcia

brunette haired woman smiling wearing blue cardigan holding book

Author Bio

Like Claudia, K.D. Garcia loves a good mystery. However, if she had run away, K.D. would’ve skipped right past the museum of art and dove into the museum of natural history. There, she would’ve focused on something spooky, like a mummy’s curse or the dark corner of the museum that might be haunted. After solving the mystery, K.D. would’ve spent her time studying the vertebrates of the world, because animals hold her entire heart. In real life, K.D. writes Middle Grade stories that are filled with family, friends, and fur babies alongside a mystery that may or may not involve a friendly (or unfriendly) haunting.

Why I’m Excited to Join WNDMG

I’m looking forward to contributing to WNDMG for a bunch of reasons. The opportunity to introduce MG readers to worlds where diverse people reach their full potential tops the list. Lots of middle graders haven’t been exposed to all the stereotypes us older folks have, and I believe that more inclusive books for MG-ers will translate to a more inclusive society—one day.

Shifa Saltagi Safadi

Muslim woman in white head covering smiling at camera

Author Bio

Shifa is always running, but not away from anything…rather to a quiet corner where she can read a good book in peace. When she’s not correcting grammar and teaching ELA to her middle school students or reviewing books on her Muslim bookstagram @muslimmommyblog, you can find her tapping away at her keyboard and inventing her own adventures with Syrian Muslim American main characters like herself and her four kids. Shifa lives near Chicago, and is the author of multiple picture books, and an unannounced MG Novel in Verse coming in 2024!

Website

Instagram

Twitter

Why I’m Excited to Join WNDMG

I am hugely looking forward to being a WNDMG member as I am a superfan of all diverse books! As an ELA teacher for middle school students as well as a book blogger, I love seeing kids and parents alike with eyes that light up at seeing someone who looks like them or even has their same name in a book! Growing up as a Syrian Muslim in America, books were the way I made sense of the world, and although I often found myself searching for Muslims or Syrians in books- there truly was no rep besides damaging stereotypes.

Fast forward to when I started my Muslim book blog @muslimmommyblog in 2018, I was so excited to finally start finding Muslim and Arab books- and so I shared them on my instagram- with huge success and so many people constantly contacting me thanking me for letting them know about the diverse book options out there, as even Muslims and Arabs are hugely diverse!

I am so proud and happy to be a part of a community of writers and readers who help amplify marginalized voices, and am honored to be a part of the wonderful WNDMG group at MUF, and get the opportunity to champion and support even more diverse voices!

Ines Lozano

Author hedshot brown haired brown skin woman smiling in camera

Author Bio

Ines Lozano writes children’s fiction, believing that our best stories come from the memories forged during childhood.

A proud latina, nothing drives her more than the chance to prove her family’s sacrifices worthwhile. Her grandparents came to the States from El Salvador and Puerto Rico with the hopes of offering their children and future generations the opportunity to choose their dreams over choosing survival.

Ines was born and raised on Long Island, and she continues to live there now with her husband, daughter, and rising tik-tok-star dog.

When she’s not writing, you can find Ines scrolling through Instagram and TikTok or shopping online for quirky earrings.

Why I’m Excited to Join WNDMG

I’m ecstatic about being a contributing member of From The Mixed Up Files…Of Middle-Grade Authors. I look forward to amplifying BIPOC-centered middle-grade stories.

 

((Are you new to our once-monthly WNDMG Wednesday series? Welcome! We’re glad to have you. Check here to read our archived posts.))

A Ramadan Booklist and Guide for Educators and Librarians

A Ramadan Booklist and Guide for Educators

A Ramadan booklist and guide for educators just in time …. Ramadan is here, and all over the USA and world, Muslim students are preparing to fast. And very often, educators and librarians play such an important and valuable role in helping these students feel comfortable and more confident in following their faith and belonging.

Read on for more information about Ramadan … plus, we have a Ramadan booklist at the very end of this post.

Ramadan by the Calendar

In 2023, Ramadan started around March 23, and the reason I use the word around is because it actually depends on where you are in the world.

Since Ramadan is based on the lunar calendar, it moves backwards every year around 11 days, and is confirmed based on the sighting of the crescent moon in the night sky. Some Muslim communities use NASA calculations to determine when Ramadan is long before the month starts, and many wait for the moon to show in the sky- which could mean different starting days around the world, and even sometimes in the same city according to different Masjid (Mosque) leadership.

This has always been humorously nicknamed “the moon wars” by Muslims, due to the passionate debates on if the moon was sighted or not, and I have come now as an adult to appreciate the vast diversity of the Muslim community all over the world, and actually find it a lovable fun mystery of every year.

 

Ramadan Schedules

The holy month of fasting for Muslims all over the world means a change in daily schedules, and for many children aged 7-9, it might even be their first year attempting the fast.

Fasting in Ramadan means no food or drink (yes, not even water!) being consumed from dawn until sunset. So for many middle-grade students, that means waking up earlier with their families to eat suhoor or the pre-dawn meal. After a short prayer, kids go back to sleep, but this interruption might cause more sleepiness during the school day, and a need for a nap after school. Fasting continues all day until sunset, and families gather after for Iftar, a meal to break the fast.

Ramadan schedules also include a lot of extra time for doing good deeds and praying, and there are special night prayers done at the Masjid each night called Taraweeh. Many Muslim students and kids also go to these prayers, and so their sleep schedules might be a little delayed due to this as well.

Lack of eating or drinking also means not eating lunch at school (although some students may decide to break their fast at this time, which is completely okay! It depends on each kid and their comfort level).

Fasting might make it difficult for many to be in the cafeteria at this time. So where do most students go? (Where did I go as a young kid?)

 

 

The Library as a Safe Haven

As a young Muslim American, school libraries were truly my safe haven. I spent my fasting days between book shelves, passing the time by flying away on another middle grade adventure. Librarians have always looked out for me, and been there to make sure that I find the perfect middle grade book to enjoy.

Another cool library use- a place to pray!

Muslims pray five times a day- dawn, noon, afternoon, sunset, and a night prayer. These prayers are standing rituals, with bowing and prostrating, specific motions and words recited, with a Muslim focusing completely on their prayer. Many use prayer rugs to help keep the place they put their heads down on clean from any dust.

I often found the area between bookshelves the perfect place for me to pray my noon prayer, and the books really felt like the perfect quiet supportive company. The librarians were truly the coolest, always being very careful to make sure no one disturbed me while praying.

Allies

 So how can non-Muslim allies help Muslim students who are fasting during this month?

Ramadan lasts around 29 to 30 days (again based on the sighting of the crescent moon to signal the ending of the lunar month), and so students might find themselves in need of extra compassion and support, especially as the days go by.

Books, libraries, librarians, and educators play an important role in helping students with finding a safe haven to stay during lunch, as well as providing an understanding and supportive place these students can depend on.

A Ramadan Boooklist

Get those awesome middle grade book recs ready, (maybe even some Muslim middle grade options-linked below) and most of all, please make sure to completely be supportive. Muslim students often just want to feel like they belong, and being an ally goes a long way in helping them feel proud and confident in their faith.

For a school Ramadan educator guide, check out:

A great resource on educators and learning more about Ramadan is linked here and made by Muslim authors Aya Khalil and Huda Fahmy.

And a super fun Muslim Middle grade list by Muslim authors to help Ramadan students pass the time:

OMAR RISING by Aisha Saeed

A BIT OF EARTH by Karuna Riaz

ONCE UPON A EID by Aisha Saeed and SK Ali

SHOOTING KABUL by N.H. Senzai

NURA AND THE IMMORTAL PALACE by M.T, Khan

AHMED AZIZ EPIC YEAR by Nina Hamza

WORLD IN BETWEEN by Kenan Trebincevic

A PLACE AT THE TABLE by Sadie Faruqi

BHA FOR NOW by Maleeha Siddiqui

HAMRA by Hana Alkaf

OTHER WORDS FOR HOME by Jasmine Warga

((For more, check out this archived Melissa Roske interview with Muslim author Hena Khan)) 

Thank you so much librarians and educators!