Liz Hartnett and Allison Kaplan, cochairs of the ALSC Intellectual Freedom Committee, write: “Inclusiveness is a foundational idea of intellectual freedom, and it starts with knowledge about the challenges faced by people whose experience may be different from ours. Given that roughly only 12% of credentialed US librarians are Black, Indigenous, or people of color (BIPOC), it’s safe to say that most of us could learn a thing or two about the BIPOC experience in America. And considering the fact that as of 2018 less than half of children under 15 in the US are white, it seems clear the work of children’s librarians will benefit from better multicultural awareness.”