At 1 ohio school, 4 bullied teens commit suicide

Mrs. Sawyer

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101008/ap_on_re_us/us_bullying_one_town

MENTOR, Ohio – Sladjana Vidovic's body lay in an open casket, dressed in the sparkly pink dress she had planned to wear to the prom. Days earlier, she had tied one end of a rope around her neck and the other around a bed post before jumping out her bedroom window.
The 16-year-old's last words, scribbled in English and her native Croatian, told of her daily torment at Mentor High School, where students mocked her accent, taunted her with insults like "****ty Jana" and threw food at her.
It was the fourth time in little more than two years that a bullied high school student in this small Cleveland suburb on Lake Erie died by his or her own hand — three suicides, one overdose of antidepressants. One was bullied for being gay, another for having a learning disability, another for being a boy who happened to like wearing pink.
Now two families -- including the Vidovics -- are suing the school district, claiming their children were bullied to death and the school did nothing to stop it. The lawsuits come after a national spate of high-profile suicides by gay teens and others, and during a time of national soul-searching about what can be done to stop it.
[Related: School-yard bullying: A survivor's tale]
If there has been soul-searching among the bullies in Mentor — a pleasant beachfront community that was voted one of the "100 Best Places to Live" by CNN and Money magazine this year — Sladjana's family saw too little of it at her wake in October 2008.
Suzana Vidovic found her sister's body hanging over the front lawn. The family watched, she said, as the girls who had tormented Sladjana for months walked up to the casket -- and laughed.
"They were laughing at the way she looked," Suzana says, crying. "Even though she died."
Click image to see more photos

AP/Amy Sancetta
___
Sladjana Vidovic, whose family had moved to northeast Ohio from Bosnia when she was a little girl, was pretty, vivacious and charming. She loved to dance. She would turn on the stereo and drag her father out of his chair, dance him in circles around the living room.
"Nonstop smile. Nonstop music," says her father, Dragan, who speaks only a little English.
At school, life was very different. She was ridiculed for her thick accent. Classmates tossed insults like "****ty Jana" or "****-Jana-Vagina." A boy pushed her down the stairs. A girl smacked her in the face with a water bottle.
Phone callers in the dead of night would tell her to go back to Croatia, that she'd be dead in the morning, that they'd find her after school, says Suzana Vidovic.
"Sladjana did stand up for herself, but toward the end she just kind of stopped," says her best friend, Jelena Jandric. "Because she couldn't handle it. She didn't have enough strength."
[Related: Cyber-bullying: When enough is enough]
Vidovic's parents say they begged the school to intervene many times. They say the school promised to take care of her.
She had already withdrawn from Mentor and enrolled in an online school about a week before she killed herself.
When the family tried to retrieve records about their reports of bullying, school officials told them the records were destroyed during a switch to computers. The family sued in August.
Two years after her death, Dragan Vidovic waves his hand over the family living room, where a vase of pink flowers stands next to a photograph of Sladjana.
"Today, no music," he says sadly. "No smile."
___
Eric Mohat was flamboyant and loud and preferred to wear pink most of the time. When he didn't get the lead soprano part in the choir his freshman year, he was indignant, his mother says.
He wore a stuffed animal strapped to his arm, a lemur named Georges that was given its own seat in class.
"It was a gag," says Mohat's father, Bill. "And all the girls would come up to pet his monkey. And in his Spanish class they would write stories about Georges."
Mohat's family and friends say he wasn't gay, but people thought he was.
"They called him ***, homo, queer," says his mother, Jan. "He told us that."
Bullies once knocked a pile of books out of his hands on the stairs, saying, "'Pick up your books, ******,'" says Dan Hughes, a friend of Eric's.
Kids would flick him in the head or call him names, says 20-year-old Drew Juratovac, a former student. One time, a boy called Mohat a "homo," and Juratovac told him to leave Mohat alone.
"I got up and said, 'Listen, you better leave this kid alone. Just walk away,'" he says. "And I just hit him in the face. And I got suspended for it."
Eric Mohat shot himself on March 29, 2007, two weeks before a choir trip to Hawaii.
His parents asked the coroner to call it "bullicide." At Eric's funeral and after his death, other kids told the Mohats that they had seen the teen relentlessly bullied in math class. The Mohats demanded that police investigate, but no criminal activity was found.
[Related: 6 signs of cyber-bullying and what you can do about it]
Two years later, in April 2009, the Mohats sued the school district, the principal, the superintendent and Eric's math teacher. The federal lawsuit is on hold while the Ohio Supreme Court considers a question of state law regarding the case.
"Did we raise him to be too polite?" Bill Mohat wonders. "Did we leave him defenseless in this school?"
___
Meredith Rezak, 16, shot herself in the head three weeks after the death of Mohat, a good friend of hers. Her cell phone, found next to her body, contained a photograph of Mohat with the caption "R.I.P. Eric a.k.a. Twiggy."
Rezak was bright, outgoing and a well-liked player on the volleyball team. Shortly before her suicide, she had joined the school's Gay-Straight Alliance and told friends and family she thought she might be gay.
Juratovac says Rezak endured her own share of bullying — "name-calling, just stupid trivial stuff" — but nobody ever knew it was getting to her.
"Meredith ended up coming out that she was a lesbian," he says. "I think much of that sparked a lot of the bullying from a lot of the other girls in school, 'cause she didn't fit in."
Her best friend, Kevin Simon, doesn't believe that bullying played a role in Rezak's death. She had serious issues at home that were unrelated to school, he says.
After Mohat's death, people saw Rezak crying at school, and friends heard her talk of suicide herself.
A year after Rezak's death, the older of her two brothers, 22-year-old Justin, also shot and killed himself. His death certificate mentioned "chronic depressive reaction."
This March, her only other sibling, Matthew, died of a drug overdose at age 21.
Their mother, Nancy Merritt, lives in Colorado now. She doesn't think Meredith was bullied to death but doesn't really know what happened. On the phone, her voice drifts off, sounding disconnected, confused.
"So all three of mine are gone," she says. "I have to keep breathing."
___
Most mornings before school, Jennifer Eyring would take Pepto-Bismol to calm her stomach and plead with her mother to let her stay home.
"She used to sob to me in the morning that she did not want to go," says her mother, Janet. "And this is going to bring tears to my eyes. Because I made her go to school."
Eyring, 16, was an accomplished equestrian who had a learning disability. She was developmentally delayed and had a hearing problem, so she received tutoring during the school day. For that, her mother says, she was bullied constantly.
By the end of her sophomore year in 2006, Eyring's mother had decided to pull her out of Mentor High School and enroll her in an online school the following autumn. But one night that summer, Jennifer walked into her parents' bedroom and told them she had taken some of her mother's antidepressant pills to make herself feel better. Hours later, she died of an overdose.
[Related: Stop bullying by complaining – in writing]
The Eyrings do not hold Mentor High accountable, but they believe she would be alive today had she not been bullied. Her parents are speaking out in hopes of preventing more tragedies.
"It's too late for my daughter," Janet Eyring says, "but it may not be too late for someone else."
___
No official from Mentor public schools would comment for this story. The school also refused to provide details on its anti-bullying program.
Some students say the problem is the culture of conformity in this city of about 50,000 people: If you're not an athlete or cheerleader, you're not cool. And if you're not cool, you're a prime target for the bullies.
But that's not so different from most high schools. Senior Matt Super, who's 17, says the suicides unfairly paint his school in a bad light.
"Not everybody's a good person," he says. "And in a group of 3,000 people, there are going to be bad people."
StopCyberbulling.org founder Parry Aftab says this is the first time she's heard of two sets of parents suing a school at the same time for two independent cases of bullying or cyberbullying. No one has been accused of bullying more than one of the teens who died.
Barbara Coloroso, a national anti-bullying expert, says the school is allowing a "culture of mean" to thrive, and school officials should be held responsible for the suicides — along with the bullies.
"Bullying doesn't start as criminal. They need to be held accountable the very first time they call somebody a gross term," Coloroso says. "That is the beginning of dehumanization."
___
Associated Press writer Jeannie Nuss in Columbus contributed to this report.

As someone who struggled with bullying and loneliness in the past, this saddens me deeply. :csad:
 
Ahh... my good old alma mater...making the news...ugh.
 
all in one school? something is obviously wrong there. Its not like bullying does not happen everywhere else, it must be particularly intense, or there is a sever lack of support available for those bullied.
 
And some people still dont take bullying seriously. :facepalm:
 
And some people still dont take bullying seriously. :facepalm:
I got bullied worse than ANY of these stories of kids who kill themselves while I was growing up.

Sorry, I have a hard time feeling sympathy for someone who kills their own self.
 
Bullying itself just adds to whatever problems these kids had. It wasn't bullying alone, but the fact that it happens so much in schools shows a terrible lack of control by the schools administrator. I know they can't catch everything, but they should at least catch some of it.

This whole bullying bit especially with LGBT kids (because they seem so easily singled out) needs to be taken more seriously and there needs to be harsher consequences for kids who do it. I caught my share of picking but no one ever laid a hand on me. Of course school for me was decades ago.
 
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I got bullied worse than ANY of these stories of kids who kill themselves while I was growing up.

Sorry, I have a hard time feeling sympathy for someone who kills their own self.
Important tip: it's not a contest. Important tip number two: it doesn't matter if you had it worse; different people are different (which is why we call them different people) and respond differently to different conditions.

Jesus Christ, man. This is the worst post you could have possibly made.
 
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Bullying itself just adds to whatever problems these kids had. It wasn't bullying alone, but the fact that it happens so much in schools shows a terrible lack of control by the schools administrator. I know they can't catch everything, but they should at least catch some of it.
In my experience, it doesn't matter whether they catch it or not; they don't know how to stop it anyway. I'm sure if you ask anyone on the Hype who's been through it, all a teacher will ever do to curb verbal or emotional abuse is talk. They'll pull the offending child away, give them a talking to, and that's it. The child walks away knowing that they continue to behave this way without fear of punishment, and does exactly that.
 
1) Teachers have a difficult job as it is. They're supposed to be educating kids in substantive things but now we expect them to be the child's psychologist, guardian angel, teach them about sex, how to use technology, teach them the political system, run various extracurriculars, etc. I know there are some really **** teachers out there who don't do diddly squat, but blaming teachers exclusively for this isn't right. In some really rough schools it's not uncommon for teachers themselves get assaulted by students

2) Parents of bullied children need to teach them how to cope with bad things in life, it is not going to stop as you get older. If anything it gets worse because in the workplace you can't beat the crap out of someone who calls you a f@ggot or something like that. In school, most people who give you **** will back off and never bother you again if you hit them once.

3) Parents of bullies need to actually parent their kids. Unfortunately, this probably won't happen.

This might sound harsh, but a lot of people have or had it really bad and don't go and do something extreme. Try being the only black guy in an all-white school, or the only white guy in an all-black school.

The thing about the gay students is ****ed up though. I don't know why people care so much about who someone is attracted to.
 
1) Teachers have a difficult job as it is. They're supposed to be educating kids in substantive things but now we expect them to be the child's psychologist, guardian angel, teach them about sex, how to use technology, teach them the political system, run various extracurriculars, etc. I know there are some really **** teachers out there who don't do diddly squat, but blaming teachers exclusively for this isn't right. In some really rough schools it's not uncommon for teachers themselves get assaulted by students

2) Parents of bullied children need to teach them how to cope with bad things in life, it is not going to stop as you get older. If anything it gets worse because in the workplace you can't beat the crap out of someone who calls you a f@ggot or something like that. In school, most people who give you **** will back off and never bother you again if you hit them once.

3) Parents of bullies need to actually parent their kids. Unfortunately, this probably won't happen.

This might sound harsh, but a lot of people have or had it really bad and don't go and do something extreme. Try being the only black guy in an all-white school, or the only white guy in an all-black school.

The thing about the gay students is ****ed up though. I don't know why people care so much about who someone is attracted to.

They care because it's still viewed as weird. It may be decades before it's viewed as commonplace, but it's still a massive taboo, and people don't feel any grief about giving someone **** about it.
 
Okay, I've had enough of this ****. Yes, bullying is wrong, but at the same time, kids need to realize that suicide isn't the answer. Life isn't all sunshine and lollipops but that doesn't mean taking your own life is going to make things better.
 
I constantly wonder what the hell is going on with kids these days? What are the parents doing wrong that they see suicide as a solution to stupid crap like being made fun of? In all my years in public schools I knew of one fellow student who died, and while he didn't technically kill himself, and while it was probably due to people picking on him, nobody thought "Grr... it's everyone else's fault." They felt bad for his parents and shook their heads at his dumbass response to the situation.

Bullying may be "wrong" but it's a part of life, and it prepares you for the real world, and maybe, in a way, these kids did make the best decision for themselves. If they can't handle high school bullying, how are they going to handle the real world after high school?

I feel no sympathy for any of these kids, but I do feel for their families.
 
Back in High School I worked with Peer Programs where we would act as sort of counselors to other kids. I say sort of because we didn't have the training and weren't allowed to give advice, we had to direct the students to their solutions. Anyways, we used to go to monthly conferences on teen suicide with these therapists and professionals who would talk about the issues and solutions. From what I've seen, you're better off tackling the issue of suicide rather than bullying. High School is hard and for some reason that's the period of our lives in which we're the toughest on each other. In order to have an impact on bullying, you're going to have make a major cultural change. If you begin to educate teens on the ramifications of suicide and let them know that life gets better out of high school, I think you'd be making better progress.
 
We are all in the same boat in high school, insecure as hell and need to be liked. Unfortunately, that's what causes us to turn on each other during that period.
 
Personally, if I was going to kill myself anyway, I would kill those who bullied me too. Dispense some justice.

It sucks that these kids felt suicide was the only way to be free of the torment. It sucks even more that we have *****ebags on these very boards making rude or sarcastic remarks about this subject.
 
This might sound harsh, but a lot of people have or had it really bad and don't go and do something extreme.

Okay, I've had enough of this ****. Yes, bullying is wrong, but at the same time, kids need to realize that suicide isn't the answer.

I constantly wonder what the hell is going on with kids these days? What are the parents doing wrong that they see suicide as a solution to stupid crap like being made fun of?
This is pretty tired. Yeah, we all know that suicide is a pretty poor solution to one's problems, so it's not really necessary for everyone to repeat it. It's also pretty naive to assume that you understand what prompts such behaviour, or the effects these conditions have on different people with different tolerances for this kind of crap.

"Killing themselves was dumb!" is probably the least meaningful and least helpful attitude one could possibly have in this situation.

Kids are kids. It's asinine to say "Well, they didn't make the right choice!" because they're kids, and kids are not always equipped (emotionally or intellectually) to make the right choice. Clearly, these were some kids who needed help. They didn't get it, and they did something stupid. The number of people whose response is "ZOMG TEHY STOOPID, I HAS NO SYMPATHY" is absolutely absurd. These kids should have gotten the help they needed (from their parents, or from someone else), and the conditions that led to them needing that help should have never been allowed to exist in the first place.

Bullying may be "wrong" but it's a part of life, and it prepares you for the real world, and maybe, in a way, these kids did make the best decision for themselves. If they can't handle high school bullying, how are they going to handle the real world after high school?
I call bull****. Exactly what conditions in the "real world" does bullying prepare one for?
 
Back in High School I worked with Peer Programs where we would act as sort of counselors to other kids. I say sort of because we didn't have the training and weren't allowed to give advice, we had to direct the students to their solutions. Anyways, we used to go to monthly conferences on teen suicide with these therapists and professionals who would talk about the issues and solutions. From what I've seen, you're better off tackling the issue of suicide rather than bullying. High School is hard and for some reason that's the period of our lives in which we're the toughest on each other. In order to have an impact on bullying, you're going to have make a major cultural change. If you begin to educate teens on the ramifications of suicide and let them know that life gets better out of high school, I think you'd be making better progress.

This is probably true, though it's pretty sad that "Well, suffer through it" is our solution to kids being miserable.
 
This stuff pisses me the **** off. A friend of mine committed suicide in high school.
 
This is pretty tired. Yeah, we all know that suicide is a pretty poor solution to one's problems, so it's not really necessary for everyone to repeat it. It's also pretty naive to assume that you understand what prompts such behaviour, or the effects these conditions have on different people with different tolerances for this kind of crap.

"Killing themselves was dumb!" is probably the least meaningful and least helpful attitude one could possibly have in this situation.

Kids are kids. It's asinine to say "Well, they didn't make the right choice!" because they're kids, and kids are not always equipped (emotionally or intellectually) to make the right choice. Clearly, these were some kids who needed help. They didn't get it, and they did something stupid. The number of people whose response is "ZOMG TEHY STOOPID, I HAS NO SYMPATHY" is absolutely absurd. These kids should have gotten the help they needed (from their parents, or from someone else), and the conditions that led to them needing that help should have never been allowed to exist in the first place.

Can't speak for anyone else, but I certainly am not laughing at any of this, and I don't think anyone else is either. Since you decided to ignore everything else I wrote, I'll just leave with this:

When you've been around the block as much as I have, North American high school drama becomes patently absurd.

Throw on the news and you'll see that there are children who have to work to support themselves, children who are forced to do some of the dirtiest and most dangerous jobs for nothing, children fighting in wars and prostituting themselves.

Fact is, if you're posting on the Hype you probably have a more comfortable life than 95% of the people on this rock.

I call bull****. Exactly what conditions in the "real world" does bullying prepare one for?

Do you work? Have you ever run any kind of business? Ever had to negotiate for something? Bullying only gets worse after high school. That's why it's important that people learn how to deal with things constructively when they are young.

I see you're in Toronto (how often do you take the subway btw? Because you can witness plenty of 'real world' bullying there). I suggest you check out the Ontario Human Rights Commission's website and look at the typical kinds of cases that arise. Ostracising people at work and holding them down regardless of their performance is a far more serious societal issue than Person A calling Person B a vagina headed ******.
 
Can't speak for anyone else, but I certainly am not laughing at any of this, and I don't think anyone else is either. Since you decided to ignore everything else I wrote, I'll just leave with this:

When you've been around the block as much as I have, North American high school drama becomes patently absurd.

Throw on the news and you'll see that there are children who have to work to support themselves, children who are forced to do some of the dirtiest and most dangerous jobs for nothing, children fighting in wars and prostituting themselves.

Fact is, if you're posting on the Hype you probably have a more comfortable life than 95% of the people on this rock.

You're forgetting that kids are kids. High school is their ENTIRE life. They've never been "around the block" like you say you have. I sure as hell know when I was 16 I never watched the news, or travelled to third world countries. But that's the sad truth about teenagers, they live and breathe high school life. Maybe only you watched the news because you didn't have any friends in school. I don't know.

I don't think that guy kid who took his own life, found it "absurd" when his buddies filmed him making-out with a guy. To him, his entire world collapsed on top of him.
 
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You're forgetting that kids are kids. High school is their ENTIRE life.

Er, ok. Where's the family in all of this? Does the kid have a job outside of school? Volunteering? Sports? Having something as the absolute centre of your life isn't healthy.

They've never been "around the block" like you say you have. I sure as hell know when I was 16 I never watched the news, or travelled to third world countries.

Meh, I used to be interested in politics and such. Now that **** just depresses me.

But that's the sad truth about teenagers, they live and breathe high school life. Maybe only you watched the news because you didn't have any friends in school. I don't know.

Yes, mock people who disagree with you.:awesome:

I don't think that guy kid who took his own life, found it "absurd" when his buddies filmed him making-out with a guy. To him, his entire world collapsed on top of him.

I hope the people who did that are punished. But the fact remains, the only way to stop this sort of behaviour is for PARENTS to actually, you know, PARENT their children. This is never going to happen, because parents of bullies generally don't give a **** about their kids, which is why they turn out this way. So all we're left with growing thicker skins and counting the blessings we do have.

Happy Thanksgiving weekend.
 
Why do people get worked up over bullying so much that they want to die? Unless you're brutally getting beat up. Moving to a new school is one thing, but DEATH!?
 
That's a myth about bullies having bad home lives or neglectful parents. That may be true for some, but it's mostly just the mob mentality. Everybody else is making fun of this kid who is different, may as well follow suit. Nothing brings people together like a common enemy. Also, it's just plain old fun making somebody feel miserable. :o :p
 
Yes, mock people who disagree with you.:awesome:

I didn't mean to mock you, and I apologize. But, I get really worked up about this sort of thing because it hits close to home. Everything kind of changes when someone close to you takes their own life.
 
That's a myth about bullies having bad home lives or neglectful parents. That may be true for some, but it's mostly just the mob mentality. Everybody else is making fun of this kid who is different, may as well follow suit. Nothing brings people together like a common enemy. Also, it's just plain old fun making somebody feel miserable. :o :p

simple....but true
 

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