They called this Grade 9 girl 'disgusting' and 'ugly.' She fought back - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 01:49 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

They called this Grade 9 girl 'disgusting' and 'ugly.' She fought back

When she was the target of hurtful graffiti, Kailey Kukkola wanted to stand up for herself. She had the graffiti printed on a T-shirt and wore it to school to show words couldn't hurt her.

District applauds girl's actions, says anti-bullying efforts a top priority

Kailey Kukkola, a Grade 9 student at College Heights High School in Prince George, B.C., wore this T-shirt with words meant to hurt her as a way to stand up to bullies. (Kailey Kukkola)

The words were crudely scrawled with a black marker on the pink walls of a girls'washroom at aPrince George, B.C., high school: "Kailey Kukkola is a disgusting, flat, ugly slut."

Kailey Kukkola, a Grade 9 student at College Heights High, knew everyone who visited that washroom would have seen the words.

"At first I laughed about it because I thought it was kinda funny," Kailey told Radio West host Sarah Penton. "But then I got kinda sad. I don't know why girls do that to each other."

The graffiti on the College Heights High washroom wall that targeted Kailey Kukkola. (Kailey Kukkola)

She decided to send a message to the anonymous bully.She made a T-shirt with a photo of the hurtful graffiti emblazoned on it, and proudly wore it to school.

"I just wanted to show the person that I don't care," she said."They're just words and they shouldn't matter that much."

Listen to the full story:

School says incidents taken seriously

Kailey saidthe T-shirt was an effort to take back power from the bully. She said she got a lot of support from her friends, but one teacher "didn't get it," so she had to go to the office and explain herself.

She told the administrators she didn't think much would be done about the graffiti just one of many examples of abusive words defacing that washroom, Kailey said if she just told an adult.

But she said the meeting ended on a positive note,with the school counsellor encouraging her to join the peer leadership team.

Kailey says she has received positive feedback from the shirt. (Kailey Kukkola)

"Making a big deal like that really got it fixed, said Kailey. "And all graffiti's been taken down and now it's being taken more seriously."

Marilyn Marquis-Forster, the superintendent of Prince George schools, applauded Kailey for standing up for herself.

"Our schools take any reports of bullying or graffiti that's detrimental very seriously," Marquis-Forster said. "We believe that we're really responsive to incidents when they come forward."

She said the graffiti about Kailey was removed and the school may keep a closer eye on defacements of the washroom where it was found.

Wants to see change

Kailey's father, Aaron Kukkola, saidhe's proud of his daughter's actions.

The graffiti was first brought to her family's attention by another student.

"You don't want that to happen to anybody and when it hits home like that, you're upset," Kailey'sdadsaid.

When it came to the T-shirt idea, "I was hesitant at first," he said. "You hear the stories in the news and all over social media of kids getting bullied. Sometimes, something like this can trigger more."

But after hearing positive feedback from friends, the community and even from across B.C.,he'svery proud of her.

Kailey saidher hope is there won't be a next time for this kind of bullying ather school.

"Whoever wrote that has to be hurting, because if you're saying that about another person, you've gotta feel some of it yourself."

Kailey plans to use the shirt at an anti-bullying workshop, where she hasbeen asked to speak.

With files from CBC Radio One's Radio West