ALA President Julius C. Jefferson Jr. writes: “As I write this, many of us are reflecting on the life of the ‘boy from Troy,’ US Rep. John Lewis. For 60 years Lewis served and advocated for our collective humanity. Lewis’s legacy reminds me that service is the fundamental reason libraries exist and that reading and access to information—which are human rights—are necessary for full participation in our democracy. To carry on that legacy, how will we advocate for participation by all and serve all our communities? Or, as Lewis asked: ‘If not us, then who? If not now, then when?’”