We went to her house and visited a minute about cooking and the cooking show she had on. Some pictures caught my eye and either I or the Relief Society president asked about them.
Vanny's grandson had drawn some pictures for her because an outreach program had asked her to come tell her story. Her story of life that she hadn't shared with her children for 40 years.
As she started her story I realized we were about the same age. At 10 years old in 1969, I looked up in the sky to see if I could see the space capsule on the moon. As a family we watched the events on television and I felt the whole world was watching with us. For Vanny, American bombs fell out of the sky and destroyed her town. Luckily her immediate family was gone that day but they lost their grandparents and many of their relatives.
Bombs meant for communist Vietnamese from US military plans |
Vanny's father in the front with uncles and others from their town |
Relatives trying to escape on a boat to Vietnam. |
goodbyes |
Vanny's little sister about 4 years old still remembers the day when Vanny in a group of people being killed was grabbed by the hair with a club raised and the "boss" or man in charge said, "Don't kill that one." Vanny lived and so did her sister. When I asked what happened to the little children dependent on their sisters or mothers who were left, she said sometimes they slit them open and took their gall bladders that they hung in doorways - all these little green nibs hanging. And sometimes she explained that they swung them against a wall and bashed their head in.
Vanny was spared |
After a shift in power, families frantically tried to find each other. Vanny's mom kept asking everyone she saw about her daughter who would be taking care of a little girl. Finally one lady told her what road to go down and Vanny met up with her mom and other sister again. They took a treacherous walk through the jungle to reach a camp on the Thai border. Vanny explained how different countries would let 100 people or so into each of their countries. Vanny, her mom and sisters came on a plane to Des Moines, Iowa and were introduced to their sponsor - who didn't speak Cambodian. After some sign signals and finally an interpreter, they were shown into an apartment where they had actual beds, pots, clothes and food!! Their gratitude was immense.
Vanny talked about seeing the Elders who would walk past them and then go to doors who would shut the door in their face. For about four years the Elders never came to their door. She said they would have followed the Elders to their church if they had come.
Because of the harsh winters, when they were able to move they came to Oakland sunny California. Vanny told about going to the ocean and kneeling at the ocean edge and putting her hands in the water and then jumping up with her hands to the sky calling to all her relatives, "I'm alive, I'm alive! I am here, I am alive!"
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