Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Column: Circumstances 'Eerily Similar' In Two Boys'
Title:CN BC: Column: Circumstances 'Eerily Similar' In Two Boys'
Published On:2002-11-29
Source:Kelowna Capital News (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-01-21 18:36:33
CIRCUMSTANCES 'EERILY SIMILAR' IN TWO BOYS' SUICIDES

In early October, I broke a story about a young boy from Constable Neil
Bruce middle school who died by suicide.

He had apparently been suspended from school for smoking pot and on the
permission of his parents, had been sent home alone where he killed himself.

We will never know what went through his mind that day but it's almost
certain that he had been having thoughts of suicide long before his suspension.

It may be that his being kicked out of school was the final straw, the
catalyst that pushed him to finish something he'd been considering for awhile.

Or not. Maybe his suspension had nothing to do with the decision to take
that final step.

Either way, a 13-year-old is dead and nothing can change that.

I took considerable heat from the school district about our newspaper's
decision to go ahead with a story about his death.

Apparently staff at the school were stung by what they saw as criticism of
their decision to suspend the boy.

As well, senior administration insisted my story would encourage copycat
suicides among other impressionable youth.

Before the story was even written, I was encouraged by them to abandon it
in the face of an unwritten rule that media do not write stories about
suicide. (No other local media outlet touched the story.)

I saw the story as being about a flawed policy (sending a distraught kid
home alone) rather than trying to place blame, but that explanation fell on
deaf ears.

When the story came out, apparently my name was instant mud among
administrators and teachers alike.

A second tragedy involving a youth from the Central Okanagan has now
occurred under eerily similar circumstances.

Facing suspension from his hockey team for smoking pot, 15-year-old Jason
Ricciutti hung himself in a hotel room while on a road trip.

Similar circumstances, much different reaction.

While the first story slid by relatively unnoticed, this one has gone national.

Why, I don't know. All I do know is that both deaths deserve the same
attention, the same scrutiny and the same support for the grieving
relatives and friends left behind.

Death by suicide is the end result of mental illness just like cardiac
arrest is the end result of heart disease.

The scourge of youth suicide will only be beaten down if we can remove the
stigma from it, so teens who are in that desperate state of mind will know
they have somewhere to turn.

I'm not naive enough to think it will stop all teens from taking their own
lives, but it might be enough to knock it down a few notches from its place
as the number two killer of youth.
Member Comments
No member comments available...