Girl Who Was Called 'Ugly' After Donating Hair To Cancer Patients Gets Major Support From Internet

Girl Who Was Called 'Ugly' After Donating Hair To Cancer Patients Gets Major Support From Internet

A few snips at the hair salon turned Jetta Fosberg's selfless act into a school nightmare.

After the 10-year-old Ohio girl cut and donated 14 inches of her hair to Wigs for Kids, an organization that supports children who have lost their hair due to cancer treatments, she started being bullied at school, her mom told WHIO News in Dayton.

"She wanted it shorter, so we went back and they cut it shorter, and I think that's when things got worse," Heidi Fosberg, Jetta's mom, told the news source, noting other students would tease her daughter "about wanting to be a boy" and saying she was "ugly."

When Fosberg approached the school principal, however, she claimed he told her that "he didn't know of any child that had ever died from words," and that she and her daughter "needed to toughen up and deal with it."

In hopes of finding support for her daughter online, Fosberg created "Stand With Jetta," an anti-bullying Facebook page to make Jetta feel better after dealing with the harassment.

"Knowing that there's people who think that my haircut's cute, and that they think that I'm a good person, it kind of helps me fight against [the bullies]," Jetta told WHIO News.

As of Monday afternoon, the "Stand With Jetta" page had garnered more than 21,000 fans and hundreds of comments from supporters.

"Jetta, my cousin battled leukemia from the time she was 2 until she passed away at 12 years old," Facebook user Emily Marie Morris wrote on the page. "She never had a wig, but wanted one badly. She was bullied, too. I want you to know that what you did is amazing. You are a caring, intelligent girl that will go far in life. Honestly, I LOVE your haircut. It is bold, like you. It is unique, like you ... Keep your chin up and know that while their words hurt, they can never change who you are."

The culmination of bullying and apathetic efforts from school officials led Fosberg to pull her daughter from classes, Yahoo News reported.

"It’s tough for her," Fosberg told the outlet Friday, noting the family is looking into neighboring districts or temporary online schooling. "She loves to learn and to read. She has a really great group of friends there who she misses.”

Fosberg posted an update to Facebook on Saturday letting supporters know the president and CEO of National Heritage Academies, the company which manages Jetta's charter school, reached out directly to apologize and is taking the family's concerns seriously.

To show support for Jetta, "like" her anti-bullying page on Facebook.

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