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Black-owned children's bookstore in Raleigh moving after threats, owner says

Liberation Station Bookstore, North Carolina's first Black-owned children's bookstore, is moving out of downtown Raleigh less than a year after it opened.
Posted 2024-04-02T13:36:15+00:00 - Updated 2024-04-03T00:03:11+00:00
Family behind Black-owned bookstore blames threats for closure

Liberation Station Bookstore, North Carolina's first Black-owned children's bookstore, is moving out of downtown Raleigh less than a year after it opened.

Liberation Station opened on Juneteenth 2023 at 208 Fayetteville St. on the second floor of the Efird's building. The bright, intimate space hosts events and sells children’s books written and illustrated by Black and underrepresented authors and illustrators.

"Unfortunately, we live in a country that has given permission to the nameless and faceless people to make threats and cause harm, emotional harm," owner Victoria Scott-Miller said.

On Monday, Scott-Miller posted on Instagram that the bookstore will leave its space on April 30 after receiving "numerous threats." Scott-Miller is a mother of two boys and said one concerning phone call mentioned her eldest son.

"Since September, we’ve faced numerous threats following the opening of our store," Scott-Miller wrote. "Some we brushed off, while others included a disturbing phone call detailing what our son Langston wore when he was at the shop alone."

Scott-Miller said she and her family took a break from operating the store for about two weeks after the threats started. She operates the store with her husband and 13-year-old son.

"We went away for two weeks just to breathe and process that the thing we had created for good was now attempting to be destroyed and taken away from us in some way," she said.

Last year, Scott-Miller told WRAL News her children play an active role in deciding what books the store sells.

In response to the threats, Scott-Miller said she frequently changed operating hours.

"We’ve been strategizing within our means to avoid being targeted," she wrote.

In January, Scott-Miller said she brought the threat concerns to the landlords of the building when they started showing the space to potential new tenants.

"Because we’re in the business of children, we’re responsible for their safety," Scott-Miller said.

Scott-Miller explained why she was initially reluctant to share her concerns.

"Part of the reason why we didn’t want to talk about this is because I didn’t want to become the face of another movement," she said. "I didn’t want to become the face of another cause.

"I wanted to settle into this space with a peace that we all deserve."

Scott-Miller said the move does not mean the end of Liberation Station, writing, "It certainly won’t mark the end of Liberation Station Bookstore. There is so much more work to be done."

On Tuesday, Scott-Miller said the bookstore would remain operational until April 13.

"Afterwards, we will begin our move forward," Scott-Miller said. "Any remaining inventory will be donated to literacy nonprofits throughout the Triangle."

Scott-Miller said the bookstore would "go back to the drawing board to reassess and redefine what we will need in our next location."

Scott-Miller described Liberation Station Bookstore was "everything."

"It is a sanctuary," Scott-Miller said. "It is a home. It’s church. It is your grandmama’s dinner table."

Before securing its brick-and-mortar space, Liberation Station hosted pop-up bookstore events across the area.

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