I don’t usually post on Fridays, but wanted to share this story, written by reporter Bill Hughes. It appeared in yesterday’s print version of the Cecil Guardian, a local newspaper in Elkton, MD.
I am proud of the Skills for Living community, who has enough love and caring stretch across many miles. All week, the kids have packed a box of notes, cards, stickers and small gifts that will be sent to Kaleb’s middle school on Saturday.
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Kaleb with his mom and dad, James and Jessica Kula during a taping of the Today Show on Monday night. |
SCHOOL OF HARD KNOCKS
Photos and story by Bill Hughes, Cecil Guardian
ELKTON – Coming home from school for many is a relief after a long day in the classrooms, unless your unfortunate like Kaleb Kula, 11, of Elkton on Tuesday last week. A sixth grade student at Elkton Middle School who has been tormented by his peers since first grade, Kaleb is coming out a hero as his story has gone global. Thanks to a prankster who thought it would be fun to upload video to a Facebook page, what goes around, came around abruptly.
Bullying has been an abundant part of Kaleb’s school years on a daily basis and the bullies seem to win until last week. Moments after disembarking from his bus stop in Buckhill Farms, Kaleb was taunted by a bully as another student filmed what is now evidence of what Kaleb has been the victim of and fodder for the news media from Washington DC to New York City to the United Kingdom and even Nigeria among other countries. The event has created a worldwide media storm. From The Today Show, WMAR Channel 2 News, WBFF 45 News and WJZ Channel 13 among others, they have visited Kaleb and his parents to get their story after the incident. The Kula’s continue to get supportive emails from a variety of countries including Scotland and countless online news sources and bloggers around the world.
Before Kaleb could relax with his Nintendo DS and snack on some Ben & Jerry’s Chocolate Fudge Brownie on Monday night while wearing his Angry Birds shirt, he relived his experience again to Baltimore’s WJZ news crew and then to a Today Show crew from Washington DC. The lights were bright, the interviews were lengthy, but he remained patient and answered reporters questions along with his parents James and Jessica Kula.
After the video originally hit the Facebook page, dozens of people had checked it out. The victim was not in on the joke. “Everybody just wanted to see a fight and wanted me to fight,” said a more relaxed, but embarrassed Kaleb on Tuesday evening. “I wasn’t eager about the fight. He (bully) came over and punched me. He had it all planned out. I told him to stop because he won, because I didn’t want to get hit again. First thing I thought was, I hope my sister (Kara) doesn’t find out. How am I going to explain this to Kara? Imagine telling your sister you’ve been beat up. I remember my ear was bleeding and it felt like I had a concussion. It still hurts a bit.”
Kara did find out quickly after seeing it on Facebook and called their mom Jessica. “I can understand it’s a little embarrassing and he didn’t want people in trouble,” said Kara Kula, 16. “It wasn’t until we saw everything on Facebook, that we knew it was premeditated.”
As Kaleb is becoming a hero in all this, he credits his neighbor Ricky Hillsgrove, a junior at Elkton High and another friend with stopping the onslaught. “When everybody started crowding around, I didn’t know what was going on,” said Ricky who was visiting the Kula’s on Tuesday. “I stopped it and someone else knocked the (camera) phone out of their hands.”
Kaleb might have lost the fight he did not even participate in, but the bully lost the battle as Elkton Police has charged the juvenile with second degree assault charges.
For someone who was the target of a senseless crime, he still feels bad about himself. “It’s just that I have bad luck and everybody’s rude to me,” added Kaleb who has been subject to punching, kicking, pushing among other things during his school age years.
Now a week later, the Kula’s have been busy with interviews, bringing attention to his autism and bullying. The story has brought an outcry from Facebook members, locals and countless bloggers. One of them is from Norwell Massachusetts.
“I was thinking, he’s very well put together for what he’s been through,” said Katy Shamitz, director and blogger at Skills For Living in Norwell during a phone interview early Tuesday morning. The center in Boston, helps kids develop social thinking skills and teaches empathy. ”I’m impressed with him. So many of our kids suffer in silence. You (Kaleb) have some friends in Massachusetts who care. We can do things. All the students from my center are going to send him gifts and notes. We are going to send it to his middle school. We want him to know that people are paying attention, people care and something should be sent next week. You tell him he’s fine and our hearts go out to him.”
His parents also hope that the word gets out about autism. “The point we’re trying to get out of this is to get things to change not only in Cecil County, but nationwide,” said Kaleb’s dad James Kula. “Kids see that he is so bright, they don’t understand what autism is. We’d like to get him into martial arts.”
“I actually got a phone call from Kara that Kaleb got punched in the face as he got off the bus,” said his mom, Jessica Kula. “You worry every single day. Especially when you know he does get picked on.”
This Saturday at ATA (American Taekwondo Association) Martial Arts of Maryland, beside the Appleton Market (1005D Elk Mills Rd.), owner Josh Hayhurst, is ironically providing a free “Defeating The Bully” seminar at his studio. “Every kid is different (being trained) whether they are autistic or not,” said Josh in a phone interview on Tuesday. “We offer this family seminar. The instructors teach the kids, the kids teach the parents and they can rehearse it at home. It’s like changing the oil in a car, it’s refreshed in their brain.”
The seminar is from 9:30am-2:30pm and ATA is expecting a hundred people.
Whether bullying stems from poor self esteem or being bullied themselves, many of them may feel better if they can dominate someone who they know will not fight back or cannot. Kaleb feels like he is just “unlucky” and unable to fight back, making him a target from his own classmates. The Outreach Program in Perryville puts efforts into turning around troubled kids in the area.
“We find that most of our cases referred to us for bullying are a result of low self esteem, insecurities, family problems and unstable home environments,” said Michelle Lewis, director of the Perryville Police Department Outreach Program. The program has its own Facebook page. “Teens who may not have been friends in school, get to know each other here and develop surprisingly close friendships. Our program has no tolerance for bullying and we do not have problems here.”
Although the media coverage has been numerous, Kaleb is making a difference in the world from his home in Elkton. He hopes it helps others with autism too. “It’s cool that everybody’s worried about me,” he said about the recent emails, letters and attention. “I hope other people get support.”
As Kaleb started his new semester at Elkton Middle on Tuesday, he was looking forward to science class and hopes to make a volcano. He likes the TV show Big Bang Theory and is a fan of the music group Blink 182. He has one message for the Cecil County Public School system and schools around the world. ”I would like to see no bullying in every school.”