.: Articles / Southwestern HS suspends 15
year old student for 'hex'
Witchcraft:
Southwestern High School disciplines a 15-year-old girl accused
of casting a spell on another student. By John Rivera Sun Staff
Baltimore Sun, October 21, 1998
Southwestern
High School was thrown into turmoil yesterday when a ninth-grader
accused her classmate, an admitted practicing witch who is the daughter
of a witch, of putting a hex on her.
In
an incident seemingly more appropriate for a Halloween tale than
for a public school, Jamie Schoonover, a 15-year-old freshman, was
sent home yesterday with an official city schools discipline form,
which cited the reason for the referral as "casting a spell on a
student."
Earl
L. Lee, principal of the Alpha Academy that comprises the school's
ninth grade, has summoned the parents of both girls to his office
today to sort everything out. "This is the first case I've ever
had like this in 29 years," Lee said. "This is totally new to me."
Schoonover
said it's all a misunderstanding. She would never cast a spell because
the principles of Wicca, a form of neo-paganism that she and her
mother practice, dictate that whatever you do, good or evil, returns
to you threefold.
"If
she was to go ahead and cast some evil spell, she would look at
it coming back to her three times over," said her mother, Colleen
Harper. "I don't think that she'd want to do that."
Harper
says she believes her daughter has become a target because of her
religious beliefs, which are not respected by school officials.
"I'm highly upset because this is a faith we practice as devoutly
as a Christian would practice Christianity," she said.
But
school officials say the disciplinary action taken against Schoonover
is not about religion.
"The
student was suspended for allegedly threatening other students,
which is a violation of the student discipline code, which was established
by the Baltimore City school board," said Vanessa Pyatt, a city
schools spokeswoman. "The nature of the threat -- casting a spell
or whatever -- that doesn't enter into it right now."
Lee
said the incident began yesterday morning before school. A group
of five or six students ran up to him, consoling a girl who was
in tears, he said. "The other child was crying so hard I couldn't
get anything out of her," he said. "I've never seen a child so upset
about anything. I thought she had been in a fight or something,
the way she was hysterical and out of control. "They said this new
girl at school, who was a witch, who practices Satanism, had cast
a spell on her," Lee said.
When
Lee got back to his office, Schoonover was waiting for him. "I began
to question her. I said, `What is this about, you casting a spell
on a child?' She said, `I know how to do it, but I would never cast
a spell on a child.'
"I
asked her, Do you practice witchcraft?' And she said, `Yes, I practice
witchcraft,' " he said. "It's just so new to us that a child openly
admits she practices witchcraft. It's very bizarre to us. So, we
wanted to get the parents involved, to see if they had any knowledge
of it."
Not
only does Harper know about it, she practices witchcraft with the
girl. Harper, a transsexual who was Schoonover's father but now
calls herself her mother, has been a practitioner of Wicca for a
year, after dabbling in it for five or so years.
"We're
not Satanists, simply because Satan is a Christian concept and we
don't have anything to do with Christianity," Harper said. "Unfortunately,
there are too many superstitions that have been encouraged by Hollywood's
depiction of witchcraft."
Wicca
is a benign religious practice closely associated with nature and
nature's cycles, she said.
That
confusion is at the root of the problem, Schoonover said. According
to her version of events, she and friends were sitting around a
tree when they noticed other girls had written their own names on
rocks there. One of her friends wanted to cross out the names, so
Schoonover lent the friend a white-out pen.
After
crossing out the names, the friend wrote, "Life is a virtue of death."
"The
girls came over and they thought I had put a spell on them," Schoonover
said. "I said, `No, I didn't put a spell on anybody.' " One of the
girls began to cry. "That girl was scared stiff," Schoonover said.
"She was crying and crying. She would just get scared of me looking
over at her."
Lee
said he was troubled by Schoonover's admission that she practices
witchcraft and by the effect that knowledge is having on some students.
"Because
of the information the child was giving us, we felt it was necessary
to send a letter home and to talk with her parents about how it
is affecting other children in the school," he said. "The child
said she practiced witchcraft, so we want additional information
about this witchcraft, whether it's a true religion or not. I have
to do some further research."
I
SPOKE TO EARL LEE AND VERIFIED THIS ARTICLE, I TOLD HIM I WAS RESEARCHING
THE EFFECTS OF WITCHCRAFT BEING FED TO OUR CHILDREN THROUGH THE
MEDIA. HE STATED, "YOU HAVE REASON TO BE CONCERNED".
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