‘I Want Someone to Kill Me’: Mom Shares Devastating Clip of Son, Bullied for Dwarfism, Celebrities Respond

‘I Want Someone to Kill Me’: Mom Shares Devastating Clip of Son, Bullied for Dwarfism, Celebrities Respond
Getty Images | Jason McCawley
Updated:

A mother has shared heartbreaking footage of her 9-year-old son, who has dwarfism, in tears after a brutal bullying incident as a call to schools and parents everywhere to up the ante on disability awareness. Since the footage went viral, millions of people, including several high-profile celebrities, have come forward to support the little boy Quaden.

Yarraka Bayles shared the distressing footage of her son in tears after a traumatizing interaction with school bullies on Feb. 19, 2020. Quaden was born in Brisbane, Australia, and is of aboriginal descent. He also has achondroplasia, the most common form of dwarfism.

Sobbing desperately on the passenger seat of his mother’s car, Quaden cries, “I’m gonna die right now, I want someone to kill me.”

“So now we have a very, severely suicidal child who is sick of the bullying that is every single day,” Yarraka explains, through tears. The devastated mom shared the video clip on social media shortly thereafter; to date, the video has been viewed tens of millions of times.

Yarraka explained to SBS that she had witnessed one of Quaden’s classmates patting him on the head and teasing him for his stature immediately prior to Quaden’s breakdown, and that her son has attempted to take his own life in the past as a result of being bullied.
Yarraka is now considering homeschooling her son. However, the distraught mom advocates education over reprimand for the bullies themselves; as per SBS, since Quaden’s ordeal, Yarraka has publicly called for disability awareness to be introduced into the Australian school curriculum.
Support for Quaden flooded in after his mother’s video went viral, including from a number of celebrities who were touched and troubled by the little boy’s ordeal. Hollywood actor Hugh Jackman posted a video to Twitter in which he spoke directly to the bullied 9-year-old.

“Quaden, you are stronger than you know, mate,” the “X-Men” actor began, “and no matter what, you’ve got a friend in me.”

Quaden on the field during the NRL match between the Indigenous All-Stars and the New Zealand Maori Kiwis All-Stars at Cbus Super Stadium on the Gold Coast, Australia, on Feb. 22, 2020 (©Getty Images | <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/quaden-bayles-looks-on-with-cody-walker-of-the-indigenous-news-photo/1207917557?adppopup=true">Jason McCawley</a>)
Quaden on the field during the NRL match between the Indigenous All-Stars and the New Zealand Maori Kiwis All-Stars at Cbus Super Stadium on the Gold Coast, Australia, on Feb. 22, 2020 ©Getty Images | Jason McCawley
As per Insider, Brad Williams, a comedian who has the same type of dwarfism as Quaden, launched a GoFundMe account on behalf of the Bayles family to raise enough money to send Quaden and his mother to Disneyland in California. To date, the fund has raised almost AU$500,000 (US$330,000), 50 times the account’s original goal.

“This isn’t just for Quaden,” Williams wrote, “this is for anyone who has been bullied in their lives and told they weren’t good enough. Let’s show Quaden, and others, that there is good in the world and they are worthy of it.”

“After all the flights, hotel, tickets, and food is paid for,” Williams explained, “any excess money will be donated to anti-bullying/anti-abuse charities.”

Quaden runs onto the field before the NRL match at Cbus Super Stadium on Feb. 22, 2020. (©Getty Images | <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/quaden-bayles-runs-onto-the-field-before-the-nrl-match-news-photo/1207909862?adppopup=true">Jason McCawley</a>)
Quaden runs onto the field before the NRL match at Cbus Super Stadium on Feb. 22, 2020. ©Getty Images | Jason McCawley

The support didn’t end there. For rugby-mad Quaden, the icing on the cake came in the form of an invitation from the National Rugby League’s Indigenous All-Stars team to join them on the field before their game against the Maori Kiwis All-Stars on Feb. 22.

“We’ve got your back,” the team stated in Quaden’s video invitation, as per the BBC, “and just want to make sure that you are doing alright. We want you around; we want you to lead us out on the weekend.”
Quaden walking with the Indigenous All-Stars at Cbus Super Stadium on Feb. 22, 2020 (©Getty Images | <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/quaden-bayles-runs-onto-the-field-before-the-nrl-match-news-photo/1207917671?adppopup=true">Jason McCawley</a>)
Quaden walking with the Indigenous All-Stars at Cbus Super Stadium on Feb. 22, 2020 ©Getty Images | Jason McCawley

On the day of the game, Quaden held team captain Joel Thompson’s hand and walked out onto the field amid cheering from the gathered crowd. Yarraka commented that Quaden was “going from the worst day of his life to the best day of his life.”

“Nobody knows the battles we face in private,” Yarraka reflected, speaking to SBS. “I usually share all the positive highlights, but [bullying] needs to be addressed to save our babies’ lives.”