조승희가 중고등학교 다닐때 놀림을 당했다는…

  • #99301
    ….. 68.***.109.181 4125

    학교 친구들의 증언이 나왔네요.
    심지어 “Go back to China” 라는 놀림까지 당했다네요.
    물론 이것으로 살인을 정당화 할 수 는 없지만 왜 그렇게 삐뚤게 나갔는지 짐작이 조금은 갑니다.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/virginia_tech_shooting;_ylt=AvyaMdGJGxBuOdeSrv9DyGis0NUE

    Va. Tech shooter was laughed at

    BLACKSBURG, Va. – Long before he boiled over, Virginia Tech gunman Cho Seung-Hui was picked on, pushed around and laughed at over his shyness and the strange way he talked when he was a schoolboy in the Washington suburbs, former classmates say.

    Chris Davids, a Virginia Tech senior who graduated from Westfield High School in Chantilly, Va., with Cho in 2003, recalled that the South Korean immigrant almost never opened his mouth and would ignore attempts to strike up a conversation.

    Once, in English class, the teacher had the students read aloud, and when it was Cho’s turn, he just looked down in silence, Davids recalled. Finally, after the teacher threatened him with an F for participation, Cho started to read in a strange, deep voice that sounded “like he had something in his mouth,” Davids said.

    “As soon as he started reading, the whole class started laughing and pointing and saying, `Go back to China,'” Davids said.

    Cho shot 32 people to death and committed suicide Monday in the deadliest one-man shooting rampage in modern U.S. history. The high school classmates’ accounts add to the psychological portrait that is beginning to take shape, and could shed light on the video rant Cho mailed to NBC in the middle of his rampage at Virginia Tech.

    In the often-incoherent video, the 23-year-old Cho portrays himself as persecuted and rants about rich kids.

    “Your Mercedes wasn’t enough, you brats,” says Cho, who came to the U.S. at about age 8 in 1992 and whose parents work at a dry cleaners in suburban Washington. “Your golden necklaces weren’t enough, you snobs. Your trust funds wasn’t enough. Your vodka and cognac wasn’t enough. All your debaucheries weren’t enough. Those weren’t enough to fulfill your hedonistic needs. You had everything.”

    Among the victims of the massacre were two other Westfield High graduates: Reema Samaha and Erin Peterson. Both young women graduated from the high school last year. Police said it is not clear whether Cho singled them out.

    Stephanie Roberts, 22, a fellow member of Cho’s graduating class at Westfield High, said she never witnessed anyone picking on Cho in high school.

    “I just remember he was a shy kid who didn’t really want to talk to anybody,” she said. “I guess a lot of people felt like maybe there was a language barrier.”

    But she said friends of hers who went to middle school with Cho told her they recalled him getting picked on there.

    “There were just some people who were really mean to him and they would push him down and laugh at him,” Roberts said Wednesday. “He didn’t speak English really well and they would really make fun of him.”

    Virginia Tech student Alison Heck said a suitemate of hers on campus — Christina Lilick — found a mysterious question mark scrawled on the dry erase board on her door. Lilick went to the same high school as Cho, according to Lilick’s Facebook page. Cho once scrawled a question mark on the sign-in sheet on the first day of a literature class, and other students came to know him as “the question mark kid.”

    “I don’t know if she knew that it was him for sure,” Heck said. “I do remember that that fall that she was being stalked and she had mentioned the question mark. And there was a question mark on her door.”

    Heck added: “She just let us know about it just in case there was a strange person walking around our suite.”

    Lilick could not immediately be located for comment, via e-mail or telephone.

    Regan Wilder, 21, who attended Virginia Tech, high school and middle school with Cho, said she was in several classes with Cho in high school, including advanced-placement calculus and Spanish. She said he walked around with his head down, and almost never spoke. And when he did, it was “a real low mutter, like a whisper.”

    As part of an exam in Spanish class, students had to answer questions in Spanish on tape, and other students were so curious to know what Cho sounded like that they waited eagerly for the teacher to play his recording, she said. She said that on the tape, he did not speak confidently but did seem to know Spanish.

    Wilder recalled high school teachers trying to get him to participate, but “he would only shrug his shoulders or he’d give like two-word responses, and I think it just got to the point where teachers just gave up because they realized he wasn’t going to come out of the shell he was in, so they just kind of passed him over for the most part as time went on.”

    She said she was sure Cho probably was picked on in middle school, but so was everyone else. And it didn’t seem as if English was the problem for him, she said. If he didn’t speak English well, there were several other Korean students he could have reached out to for friendship, but he didn’t, she said.

    Wilder said Cho wasn’t any friendlier in college, where “he always had that same damn blank stare, like glare, on his face. And I’d always try to make eye contact with him because I recognized the kid because I’d seen him for six years, but he’d always just look right past you like you weren’t there.”

    In other developments, Gov. Timothy Kaine is appointing a five- to seven-member panel to investigate the shootings, the governor’s office said. The panel will review Cho’s mental health history and how police responded to the tragedy. The panel will submit a report in two to three months.

    University officials also announced that all of Cho’s student victims would be awarded degrees posthumously, and that other students terrorized by the shootings might be allowed to end the semester immediately without consequences.

    Authorities on Wednesday disclosed that more than a year before the massacre, Cho had been accused of sending unwanted messages to two women and was taken to a psychiatric hospital on a magistrate’s orders and was pronounced a danger to himself. But he was released with orders to undergo outpatient treatment.

    Also, Cho’s twisted, violence-filled writings and menacing, uncommunicative demeanor had disturbed professors and students so much that he was removed from one English class and was repeatedly urged to get counseling.

    On Wednesday, NBC received a package containing a rambling and often incoherent 23-page written statement from Cho, 28 video clips and 43 photos — many of them showing Cho, in a military-style vest and backward baseball cap, brandishing handguns. A Postal Service time stamp reads 9:01 a.m. — between the two attacks on campus.

    The package helps explain one mystery: where the gunman was and what he did during that two-hour window between the first burst of gunfire, at a high-rise dorm, and the second attack, at a classroom building.

    “You had a hundred billion chances and ways to have avoided today,” a snarling Cho says on video. “But you decided to spill my blood. You forced me into a corner and gave me only one option. The decision was yours. Now you have blood on your hands that will never wash off.”

    Col. Steve Flaherty, superintendent of the Virginia State Police, said Thursday that the material contained little they did not already know. Flaherty said he was disappointed that NBC decided to broadcast parts of it.

    “I just hate that a lot of people not used to seeing that type of image had to see it,” he said.

    On NBC’s “Today” show Thursday, host Meredith Vieira said the decision to air the information “was not taken lightly.” Some victims’ relatives canceled their plans to speak with NBC because they were upset over the airing of the images, she said.

    “I saw his picture on TV, and when I did I just got chills,” said Kristy Venning, a junior from Franklin County, Va. “There’s really no words. It shows he put so much thought into this and I think it’s sick.”

    ___

    Associated Press writers Allen G. Breed, Vicki Smith, Sue Lindsey and Justin Pope in Blacksburg, Va.; Matt Barakat in Richmond, Va.; Colleen Long, Tom Hays and Jake Coyle in New York; and Lara Jakes Jordan, Sarah Karush and Sharon Theimer in Washington contributed to this report.

    • 조빠오빠 71.***.8.16

      드디어 원인이 나오고 있군..한국세키들이어찌알겠니.
      fucking chino go back ur country 라는말을들을때 족같은 감정들.
      마치..흑인 아빠가 어린 흑인소녀를데리고 놀이공원을 갔을때
      넌 검은 피부색을가지고 있어서 입장이안돼 라는 표현을 당할때 느낌.
      그소녀는 왜 /?난 검은피부를 가진 사람으로 살아가야할까 라는 생각들.

      그런부분 조금이나마 이해할것같군..
      누구나 한번쯤 당했을 일이 아닌가 ?

    • 64.***.73.126

      미국 이민와서, 그것도 중 고등학교 다니면서 또래들에게 저런 놀림쯤 안 당해본 아이들이 있을까요? “Go back to China” 주로 흑인들과 히스패닉들이 자주하는 말이군요. 듣기로는 미국 오기전 부터 우울한 성격이었다고 합니다. 결국은 타인을 나무랄 수가 없습니다. 우울증 증세를 감지하지 못하고 오랜동안 방치한 주위 사람들의 책임이 가장 큽니다. 하긴… 먹고살기 바쁜 한인 부모들이 우리애가 좀 숫기가 없나보다하는게 고작이지 병원에 데려가서 정신과 진료 받게할 생각이나 했겠습니까?

    • 63.***.203.10

      애들한테 “니들 때문에 미국와서 이 고생한다”란 말로 스트레스 주지 마십시요.
      한때 페어팩스 카운티에서 이민자 자녀들을 학원에서 가르친 적이 있는데
      암담하더군요

    • curious 128.***.149.164

      to …

      Why did you feel 암담? As a parent, I would like to know. Could you elaborate a little more? Thanks in advance.

    • sync 66.***.234.131

      점3개님께서 부모들이 그러한 말을하는것을 들으신것으로 이해를했는데요? 그 말을 들었다는것이 암담하다는것아닌가요? 부모들이 그러한 말을 한다는것은 문제가 있다고 봅니다.

    • ….. 64.***.73.126

      우리나라 부모님 중에는 그런말을 하는게 애들을 motivate하는 방법인줄 알고있는 분들도 많습니다. 그리고 부모의 은혜를 배신하지 말라는 말도 됩니다. 지속적인 관심과 인내와 지도가 아니라 부담, 부채 의식, 또는 죄책감을 심어줌으로 애들을 단속하려 하는것….. 그거 참 무식한 짓이라고 봅니다.

    • 저도 한마디 68.***.54.21

      “니들 때문에 미국와서 이 고생한다”는 말이 무식한 짓이라고 보는 분들 혹시 자녀들이 다 커서 대학에 들어갔나요? 저는 대학 가는 아이를 둔 엄마인데 저역시 남편이 아이들에게는 말 안하지만 저한테는 매번 자기 고생이 아이들 때문이라고 합니다. 그런데 스트래스를 많이 받고 힘이 들면 들수록 더욱 심해지지요.

      저야 집에서 아이만 키워서 그런지 그런말 한번도 하지 않았지만 대부분 아빠들이 그런 생각은 하고 있으리라 생각해요.

    • 조빠오빠 71.***.8.16

      자식들땜에 미국온게 아니구 솔직히 자기들욕심때문 아닌가 /?
      자신들이 이루지못한것을 자식들에게 기대하는보상심리처럼..
      솔직히 한국사회가 그렇자나.
      미국 미국 ~!!환장들하자나.

    • 나도 한마디 24.***.228.96

      점셋님 말은, 부모들이 미국에서 고생을 안한다는 얘기도 아니고, 그게 자식때문이 아니라 딴것 때문이다는 얘기도 아니고, 설령 그게 진실이라고 해도 그것으로 자식들에게 압박을 주면 안된다는 것 아닌가요? 생각을 한다는 것과 그것을 자식들에게 표출한다는 것은 매우 다른 얘기니까요.
      제생각에도 그런 말을 자식에게 하는 것은 무식한 짓이 맞다고 봅니다. 최소한, 정말 자식을 위한다면 말입니다.

    • 조빠오빠 71.***.8.16

      어차피 자식이나 그누구를위해서라도 희생할각오를 가졌다면
      찍소리 말고 죽는그날까지 해야지. 이세키들..몸좀피곤하다고 .경제적 여유가없다고 자식들앞에서 칭얼대는 인간들.우너숭이만도 못한놈들이지.
      구곡이 단장이란 고사 성어가 있지.
      자고로 부모는 세키를 찿으로 죽기아님살기로 달리갔던 ,정말 원숭이몸안에있는 창자가 다아 찟기어질정도에 아픔을 가지고도 참았던 그런 교훈정도는 배워야지 ..둘이좋아 불타는 섹스를해서 아이만 낳음모하니 ?
      책임은 아이를낳고 작은나무처럼 잘 돌봐주는게 도리지.
      니들은 나무에 물줄때도 궁시렁 궁시렁하면서 물주니 ?/??

      자식이긴 부모없다드만..노력해도 안돼면 지 복에 지팔자지.뭘어케하니 ?

      그런데 신앙을제대로 갗음 인간은 바로서게돼있지 .
      아무리 흔들려도 마지막 중심은 바로 그곳이거든..
      그레서 바른 교회에서 바르게자란아이들은 바르게성장하는것을볼수가있지.
      인간이 할수없는 그무엇을 종교라는 도구를통해서 정신에 밑거름을 제공하지않을까 ?
      맟지 ?
      그레서 예수를믿음 3대가 복을받은다고들 하자나
      나에 경험인데..그것이맟는거같드라.

    • 조빠언니 151.***.221.139

      조빠 언니(영 글체가 여자가 쓴 글 냄새가 나서) 글은 참 알다가도 모르겠군.

      영 상식이 풍부한것 같기도 하고(어디서 줏어 들은 말은 있어서), 전혀 상식이 몰상식인것 같기도 하고.

      하여간 귀여운 맛은 가끔 있는 듯…

      하하.

    • .. 24.***.1.225

      조승희도 불쌍한 희생자네요. 어린 나이에 얼마나 영어발음때문에 무시당하고 따돌림당했으면…

    • . 24.***.137.75

      미국최고인기프로인 어메리칸 아이돌에서 사이먼은 내셔널 티비에서 go back to british(영국)라고 욕얻어 먹습니다.얼굴색이 변하더군요.그래도 그방면으로 잘하고 인기있으니까 최근들어 티비오락프로에 샤이먼하고 같은 잉글리쉬액센트사용하는 사회자등이 부쩍 많아진것 같습디다.

    • 덜덜 162.***.239.54

      go back to british(영국)?

    • k 58.***.133.107

      이건 미국에서 아무한테나 사용할 수 있을 것 같은데요?

      go back to your country!

    • barbour ashby 218.***.26.64