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Obama 'shocked and saddened' by gay-bullying suicides

In a video posted on YouTube, President Barack Obama says he's "shocked and saddened" by the recent suicides of several young people who were bullied and taunted for being gay.
Fares Akremi, 17, center, waits before the start of a candlelight procession down Ninth Street to commemorate the recent deaths of gay teens,  Wednesday at The Center Project in Columbia, Mo.
Fares Akremi, 17, center, waits before the start of a candlelight procession down Ninth Street to commemorate the recent deaths of gay teens,  Wednesday at The Center Project in Columbia, Mo. Joshua A. Bickel / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

President Barack Obama said he was "shocked and saddened" by the recent suicides of several young people who were bullied and taunted for being gay.

"As a parent of two daughters, it breaks my heart. It's something that just shouldn't happen in this country," Obama said in a video posted late Thursday on YouTube and the White House website.

It's time, he said, for Americans to dispel the myth that bullying is "just a normal rite of passage."

"I don't know what it's like to be picked on for being gay. But I do know what it's like to grow up feeling that sometimes you don't belong," Obama said. "It's tough."

The victims of bullying can sometimes feel that they are responsible for the taunting because they're different or don't fit in with everybody else.

"But what I want to say is this: You are not alone. You didn't do anything wrong. You didn't do anything to deserve being bullied," Obama said.

He encouraged young people who are depressed or down on themselves to reach out to people they trust — parents, teachers, or "folks that you know care about you just the way you are."

"Don't feel like you're in this by yourself," he advised.

Over time, Obama said, "you're going to see that your differences are a source of pride and a source of strength."

Anti-gay bullying has been in the spotlight recently after the suicides of several teenagers. The victims included Asher Brown, 13, of Houston, who shot himself with his father's handgun, and Tyler Clementi, 18, the Rutgers University freshman who jumped off the George Washington Bridge in New York after his roommate secretly recorded him with another male student, then broadcast the video online.

In a videotaped message posted earlier in the week, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said she was saddened by the suicides.

"These most recent deaths are a reminder that all Americans have to work harder to overcome bigotry and hatred," Clinton said.