Thursday, April 11, 2013

Rehtaeh Parsons

Rehtaeh

        Her name is Rehtaeh Parsons, and she died after being taken off life support Sunday, April 7. Her death was the result of a suicide attempt that was ultimately successful. The vile circumstances that led to this poor girl’s death should serve as a wakeup call to all Canadians out there. Online bullying and slut shaming have reached scary new heights in our society. We must take action to ensure that the sick and twisted chain of events that cut short the life of Rehtaeh Parsons never happen again.

She loved all of her many pets
          One night in November 2011, Rehtaeh and a friend went to another friends’s house and had a bit to drink.There were four other boys there, and at some point during the night her friend left. She was only 15 years old when she was raped by the four boys. During the rape, one of the boys took a picture and decided that it would be funny to circulate it online. Though she was drunk and barely remembered the incident the next morning, no one would ever let her forget it. No one believed that it was a rape. Everyone just thought she was a slut. Her old friends abandoned her, and she moved away to Halifax to seek escape. The bullying continued, and she fell into depression. The shaming had become so extreme that Rehtaeh was admitted to hospital and on suicide watch for 6 weeks. Eventually she managed to move home and was able to start fighting the depression. She tried to hold her head up high, and tried to simply forget about what happened. 


Rehtaeh and her father just chillin
           Rehtaeh died from suicide April 7th at 11:15 PM. She was 17 years old.

           Rehteah’s father wrote a beautiful but heart breaking piece about her. The full article which I very strongly suggest you read and share virally is available by clicking the excerpt.
“I had to write something about this. I don’t want her life to defined by a Google search about suicide or death or rape. I want it to be about the giving heart she had. Her smile. Her love of life and the beautiful way in which she lived it.  The family I found out this afternoon my daughter saved the life of a young woman with her heart. How fitting. She also gave someone a new liver, a kidney, a new breath, and a new chance to love. She saved the lives of four people with her final gift of life. She was that wonderful. Someone out there is going to look at the world with my daughter’s eyes. The most beautiful eyes I have ever seen.”

         The piece written by her father and interview with her mother almost brought me to tears. There is a strength and nobility in the way her parents are dealing with the death of their precious daughter. There are no calls for revenge, or vigilante justice. Just some good, honest people trying to do the best they can after losing the one they loved the most in this world.

        I guess the rest of it falls on us, the teenagers of today. It’s our job now never to tolerate another instance of a young woman being bullied and abused. Alcohol is not consent. Rape makes rapists out of the perpetrators, not sluts out of the victims. Let this tragedy be a turning point that forever changes how we view those victims.

3 comments:

  1. I can't believe that she moved to Halifax, and even there she was still bullied.

    What's so ridiculous about her suicide is that they apparently didn't have enough evidence to convict the guys when she was alive, even though there were online photos of the assault. Only after she died, did they right away find new evidence that was sufficient enough to convict the boys. There's seriously a problem with that.
    Schools/authorities are so bad at dealing with bullying in Canada. I feel like acceptance of bullying is embedded in our culture.

    The piece that her father wrote almost made me cry too.

    Even after studying psychological and socialogical reasons why people bully, I still really can't understand why people can't use their common sense and you know, refrain from telling people to kill themselves or destroying people's pride.

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  2. I really do admire her bravery. It must have been so awful to have to deal with the bullying on top of being raped. I can't even imagine.

    It's so sad that we keep hearing all these stories, and yet nothing is really changing. How many times do we have to see this happen before we do something about it?

    I hope that people that are currently dealing with situations like hers can be as strong as it sounds like she tried to be.

    My heart goes out to her family as they try to deal with the loss of a beautiful daughter.

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  3. I don't understand people who say that because both the male and female are under aged that rape doesn't exist. It truly boggles my mind how occupied our society is with blaming the victim rather than the perpetrator. May she rest in peace.

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