Bullying victims remembered in vigils worldwide
Vigils, memorials follow suicide of B.C. teen Amanda Todd last week
CBC News
Posted: Oct 19, 2012 7:15 AM ET
Last Updated: Oct 19, 2012 12:29 PM ET
Related
A series of gatherings across Canada — and the world — are being held today to remember bullying victims, including the B.C. teen who committed suicide earlier this month.
Candlelight vigils, protests and moments of silence are planned for approximately 40 cities in Canada, the U.S., Malaysia and India, according to organizers.
Events were scheduled in several Canadian cities, including Truro, N.S., Halifax, Calgary, Edmonton and a large rally in Surrey, B.C., the home province of Amanda Todd, a 15-year-old from Port Coquitlam. The teen took her own life in her family home on Oct. 10 after posting a video on YouTube using cue cards to describe how she sank into depression while enduring years of online bullying, blackmail and physical assaults at school.
Her death has sparked an outpouring of sympathy on the internet, and has prompted calls for greater attention to the issue of bullying, particularly on the internet.
"Hundreds of people have just started to arrive, many of them dressed in pink, thinking about Amanda Todd," CBC's Chris Brown said Friday evening from the vigil in Surrey, B.C.
Lucky Gill is one of the founders of a new organization, Global Girl Power, which lists the cities taking part in Friday's memorials.
"We want kids around the community to know there is support available, there's organizations that can help them," Gill said. "It does not have to end like that."
Gill, who also organized the rally at Holland Park in Surrey, noted that the push to end bullying needs to be part of a broader effort. "I think this has to be an issue that is consistently discussed, and consistently something we work at ending," Gill said.
Taking anti-bullying action
As part of Friday's events to remember bullying victims, the 250,000 students and 40,000 staff with the Toronto District School Board — the country's largest — observed a minute of silence in the morning at 11 a.m. ET.
While the victims of bullying often suffer in silence, one Toronto school has had success with tackling a bullying problem and getting kids to speak out.
East Alternative School of Toronto's Grade 7 and Grade 8 classes attend regular anti-bullying workshops where students sit in randomly assigned spots in the cafeteria in order to break up cliques.
Students at the school can also report bullying anonymously, without fear of retribution.
"It's never just between one person and another," said Lynn Heath, the school's head teacher. "A bunch of people are involved, so witnesses know they can come to us and something will be done."
According to the Canadian Institute for Health Research, one in three adolescent students has reported being bullied.
In Nova Scotia, people carrying candles called for the Todd's tragic death to be a catalyst for change.
Friday's memorial gatherings come a day after police in London, Ont., reported that eight girls had been arrested for criminal harassment in connection with a bullying case at a city high school. They say an investigation revealed that a student was the target of physical, emotional and online bullying.
Police say information was received through direct statements and an anonymous reporting portal on the school's website.
A teenage boy in Toronto is also facing charges of child pornography distribution, extortion and making death threats after police say he tried to coerce a girl, using pictures she had sent him online, into sending him an intimate video of herself.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Senior Pakistani politician shot dead
- Gunmen in Pakistan have killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
- Rescue attempt over for New Brunswick fishermen
- The rescue attempt for two missing fishermen has been called off in New Brunswick, hours after one body was found. more »
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- About 50 to 60 people were injured after a driver described by witnesses as an elderly man drove his car into a group of hikers marching in a parade in a small Virginia mountain town. more »
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- A 20-year-old woman died Saturday during an event for Jeep enthusiasts held in a parking lot just west of downtown Edmonton. more »
Must Watch
Latest Canada News Headlines
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- A 20-year-old woman died Saturday during an event for Jeep enthusiasts held in a parking lot just west of downtown Edmonton. more »
- Rescue attempt over for New Brunswick fishermen
- The rescue attempt for two missing fishermen has been called off in New Brunswick, hours after one body was found. more »
- 1 person hurt after trains collide near Medicine Hat
- The Transportation Safety Board of Canada is deploying a team to the site of a two-train collision east of Medicine Hat. more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford cancels weekly radio show
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford will not be hosting his weekly radio show this weekend after explosive allegations that he was recorded on video appearing to smoke crack cocaine. more »
The National
The Current
- Why thousands of people want a one-way trip to Mars May. 17, 2013 4:08 PM Nearly 80,000 people are eager to blast off on a one-way colonizing mission to Mars - but some experts believe no one is likely to get off the ground.
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford cancels weekly radio show
- Rescue attempt over for New Brunswick fishermen
- Winning ticket sold in Florida for $590M Powerball jackpot
- Email is proof Senate greenlit expenses, Brazeau says
- Astronaut Chris Hadfield adjusts to 'earthling' life
- Senior Pakistani politician shot dead
- 1 person hurt after trains collide near Medicine Hat
