Lowell man writes of genocide in native Cambodia
LOWELL, Mass.
— The moon would rise above the muddy Cambodian rice paddies just when
Seng Ty thought he had nothing left in his body to pull weeds out.
The
Angkar, or the "organization" as the Khmer Communist Party called
itself, was merciless. The communists running the labor camp wanted
children to work extra hours when there was moonlight. They would tie up
children and beat them to death if they complained. So, then-9-year-old
Ty would drag his exhausted body back to the fields for more work.
Then, for the first time in the day, Ty would break his silence — to the stars.
"Even with those children who were sleeping next to me and eating with me, I couldn't communicate," Ty said of the fearful atmosphere at the camp. "The stars were the only things I could tell what happened," Ty said. "I pretended (the bright star) was my mother and she was watching and guiding me."
He would vow to the stars: He would survive — and, one day, would tell the world what he went through in the killing fields where children's corpses floated in the canals.
Nearly four decades later, Ty kept his promise by publishing a book: "The Years of Zero, Coming of age under the Khmer Rouge."
Ty, a 46-year-old guidance counselor at Stoklosa Middle School in Lowell, was only 8 when the Khmer Rouge tortured his physician to death. His mother would soon die from overwork, followed by the deaths of seven of his 10 brothers and sisters who were tortured, starved or fell ill.
As an orphan, he ended up in the agricultural labor camp near a Thailand border. Standing in the ankle-deep water that filled the rice paddies, Ty would tend the fields from sunrise to sundown. The Angkar, who hated intellectuals, would often beat Ty for being light-skinned and looking like a rich boy.
Living only on two bowls of rice a day, many children fell ill and died. The Angkar would throw their bodies into irrigation ditches.
Ty would collect anything alive, from insects to frogs, and hide them in the field. Sometimes, the Angkar would catch him sneaking out to collect the food at night and beat him up in front of other children. But Ty didn't stop hiding food.
"For me, at the time, (I felt) I would rather die with my stomach full of food," Ty said.
Ty was freed from the labor camp in 1979 when Vietnamese forces invaded Cambodia. After living on the streets of Phnom Penh and in a refugee camp in Thailand, Ty would find his permanent home in Massachusetts in 1982 when Marlena Brown, a preschool teacher and the wife of a former diplomat from Amherst, decided to adopt the 14-year-old boy whom she saw in a photograph that appeared in Time magazine featuring the "Children of War" earlier that year.
Ty had tried to put together his stories into a book before. In "Out of the Killing Fields," which he self-published in 2005, he explained how the Khmer Rouge's brutal regime destroyed his family and devastated his homeland. Ty only made a few copies of the book, however, knowing he needed to polish the writing. That effort culminated in "The Years of Zero."
In "The Years of Zero," Ty zeroed in on some events to detail the scenes as an eyewitness. Ty said he made it a point to write in simple sentences so that the readers can easily follow a turn of events.
Ty's goal was to help people walk in his shoes. He wanted readers to feel like they were in the Cambodian jungles with him.
He knew he succeeded when hearing people say how the book drew them into the story recently. Seeing a photo of a 13-year-old Ty on the cover of the book, his sixth- and eighth-grade students came up to him asking for copies, Ty said.
Cambodian children know little about what their parents went through during the Khmer Rouge regime because it's too painful for many survivors to discuss, Ty said. Ty said there are common threads between that genocide and 21st-century terrorism, including brainwashing, and that it's important for young generations to hear firsthand accounts of genocide survivors.
For Ty, writing the book became a mission. More than three decades after his ordeal, Time reporter Roger Rosenblatt wrote about Ty, and 15 years after CBS reporter Bob Simon interviewed Ty in Cambodia for a segment on genocide for 60 Minutes. But Ty found no book publishers interested in his stories. So, he turned to self-publishing.
"It doesn't matter how it's published. I'm going to find my way," Ty told himself.
Ty credits his adopted parents, Marlena and Richard Brown, who now live in California, for much of his success in his new home country. The couple taught him how to forgive and move on, Ty said. And it was their love that inspired fellow Amherst residents to adopt 14 other children from the same refugee camp in Thailand between 1982 and 1984.
"When I first came to this country, I felt like I was born again. I felt like I had to promise to my mother that, no matter how hard it was, I had to finish my education," Ty said of his birth mother's dying wish for him to go to college. Ty received his degree in education from UMass Amherst.
The 15 adopted children of war forged an unbreakable bond. Some of them live in Lowell today, including a social worker who lives a few houses down from Ty's home in the city's Belvidere neighborhood.
Ty never forgets to tell his students to work hard and not to take anything for granted.
"I hope this book will help younger generations appreciate what they have," Ty said.
Then, for the first time in the day, Ty would break his silence — to the stars.
"Even with those children who were sleeping next to me and eating with me, I couldn't communicate," Ty said of the fearful atmosphere at the camp. "The stars were the only things I could tell what happened," Ty said. "I pretended (the bright star) was my mother and she was watching and guiding me."
He would vow to the stars: He would survive — and, one day, would tell the world what he went through in the killing fields where children's corpses floated in the canals.
Nearly four decades later, Ty kept his promise by publishing a book: "The Years of Zero, Coming of age under the Khmer Rouge."
Ty, a 46-year-old guidance counselor at Stoklosa Middle School in Lowell, was only 8 when the Khmer Rouge tortured his physician to death. His mother would soon die from overwork, followed by the deaths of seven of his 10 brothers and sisters who were tortured, starved or fell ill.
As an orphan, he ended up in the agricultural labor camp near a Thailand border. Standing in the ankle-deep water that filled the rice paddies, Ty would tend the fields from sunrise to sundown. The Angkar, who hated intellectuals, would often beat Ty for being light-skinned and looking like a rich boy.
Living only on two bowls of rice a day, many children fell ill and died. The Angkar would throw their bodies into irrigation ditches.
Ty would collect anything alive, from insects to frogs, and hide them in the field. Sometimes, the Angkar would catch him sneaking out to collect the food at night and beat him up in front of other children. But Ty didn't stop hiding food.
"For me, at the time, (I felt) I would rather die with my stomach full of food," Ty said.
Ty was freed from the labor camp in 1979 when Vietnamese forces invaded Cambodia. After living on the streets of Phnom Penh and in a refugee camp in Thailand, Ty would find his permanent home in Massachusetts in 1982 when Marlena Brown, a preschool teacher and the wife of a former diplomat from Amherst, decided to adopt the 14-year-old boy whom she saw in a photograph that appeared in Time magazine featuring the "Children of War" earlier that year.
Ty had tried to put together his stories into a book before. In "Out of the Killing Fields," which he self-published in 2005, he explained how the Khmer Rouge's brutal regime destroyed his family and devastated his homeland. Ty only made a few copies of the book, however, knowing he needed to polish the writing. That effort culminated in "The Years of Zero."
In "The Years of Zero," Ty zeroed in on some events to detail the scenes as an eyewitness. Ty said he made it a point to write in simple sentences so that the readers can easily follow a turn of events.
Ty's goal was to help people walk in his shoes. He wanted readers to feel like they were in the Cambodian jungles with him.
He knew he succeeded when hearing people say how the book drew them into the story recently. Seeing a photo of a 13-year-old Ty on the cover of the book, his sixth- and eighth-grade students came up to him asking for copies, Ty said.
Cambodian children know little about what their parents went through during the Khmer Rouge regime because it's too painful for many survivors to discuss, Ty said. Ty said there are common threads between that genocide and 21st-century terrorism, including brainwashing, and that it's important for young generations to hear firsthand accounts of genocide survivors.
For Ty, writing the book became a mission. More than three decades after his ordeal, Time reporter Roger Rosenblatt wrote about Ty, and 15 years after CBS reporter Bob Simon interviewed Ty in Cambodia for a segment on genocide for 60 Minutes. But Ty found no book publishers interested in his stories. So, he turned to self-publishing.
"It doesn't matter how it's published. I'm going to find my way," Ty told himself.
Ty credits his adopted parents, Marlena and Richard Brown, who now live in California, for much of his success in his new home country. The couple taught him how to forgive and move on, Ty said. And it was their love that inspired fellow Amherst residents to adopt 14 other children from the same refugee camp in Thailand between 1982 and 1984.
"When I first came to this country, I felt like I was born again. I felt like I had to promise to my mother that, no matter how hard it was, I had to finish my education," Ty said of his birth mother's dying wish for him to go to college. Ty received his degree in education from UMass Amherst.
The 15 adopted children of war forged an unbreakable bond. Some of them live in Lowell today, including a social worker who lives a few houses down from Ty's home in the city's Belvidere neighborhood.
Ty never forgets to tell his students to work hard and not to take anything for granted.
"I hope this book will help younger generations appreciate what they have," Ty said.
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