Ray Chum, right, is overcome with emotion as she talks with her son, KK, on back screen, during a Skype video call in Inglewood, Calif. on May 3, 2009. Tiny Toones is a hip hop group founded by KK, a former Long Beach gang member who was deported to Cambodia. (Jeff Gritchen/Staff Photographer)
05/04/2009
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)
INGLEWOOD - As Ray Chum looked at the face of the son she hadn't seen since 2003 displayed on the wall via a computer screen projection, her voice broke and the tears flowed.
The son, Tuy "KK" Sobil, whose image was being broadcast from an Internet cafe in Cambodia, was also speechless in tears.
The exchange brought an emotional climax to what has been an amazing tour of the United States by a dance troupe KK founded and comprised of street kids from Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Dabson Tuy, KK's brother, took the microphone from his mother and talked to his brother.
"Mom just wants you to be a better person," Dabson said. "To see what you're doing today, we're just so proud of you. Just keep it positive. I'm sorry you had to see all that pain."
However, the heart rending pain underscored a success story that has been nothing short of miraculous. It is a story that would never happened but for KK's fall.
About 150 people had gathered at Chuco's Justice Center in Inglewood to see the final U.S. performance of Tiny Toones, a hip-hop dance crew, and Cambodian rapper Chan Samnang, also known as K-Dep.
The story of KK and Tiny Toones has received national and international recognition in recent years.
KK was born in a Thai refugee camp and later became a gang member in Long Beach after emigrating to the U.S. with his family. In 2003, after serving a conviction for armed robbery, he was deported to Cambodia, a country he had never visited.
After KK's arrival, kids began asking him to show them dance moves. Eventually, he relented, put his personal despair aside and formed Tiny Toones.
The lure of hip-hop has since been used not only to teach kids break dancing, but provide English language education, HIV/AIDs awareness, gang prevention and other arts and life skills. Through the help of donors and other charities, Tiny Toones now has a drop-in center for impoverished teens and children in Phnom Penh.
The U.S. trip was just the latest remarkable event in the rise of Tiny Toones. Supporters here in the United States were able to secure an invitation and funding to bring six dancers and K-Dep to the U.S. for an international hip-hop dance competition in Madison, Wis., followed by trips to perform in New York, Philadelphia, Seattle and the Southland.
Although the fund-raiser in Inglewood was the group's last performance, plans are already afoot to bring them back next year.
For the dancers, the trip has been magical. Dyrithy Sovann, who goes by the stage name Fresh, said he never dreamed he'd ever see the United States.
Sovann, 17, is particularly adept at one-hand stands and head spins. On Sunday, he was learning the excitement of skateboarding, which the group was first introduced to several days ago.
Sovann met KK four years ago after going with some friends to watch him dance.
At Saturday's performance, Sovann played a lead role in the Monkey Dance, which has become the group's signature piece.
In the dance, the troupe begins with Keo Srey Leak, aka Diamond, the lone girl in the troupe dancing in classical Cambodian style. Gradually, traditional music gives way to hip-hop and the entire troupe launches into a full-fledged tumbling, spinning, hip-hop routine.
In addition to the performances, Tiny Toones dancers have engaged in impromptu cultural exchanges.
In Seattle, they met with a group of first-generation Cambodians from a group called Khmer In Action.
Grace Kong of KIA said the two groups learned much from each other.
Kong said the dancers feared they would be looked down upon and shunned when they came to the U.S.
Instead they have been overcome by the welcome they have received.
"We wanted them to see that no matter what, they have our support, they have Khmer Americans who love them," Kong said.
Information on Tiny Toones can be found online at www.tinytoonescambodia.com.
greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291
The son, Tuy "KK" Sobil, whose image was being broadcast from an Internet cafe in Cambodia, was also speechless in tears.
The exchange brought an emotional climax to what has been an amazing tour of the United States by a dance troupe KK founded and comprised of street kids from Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Dabson Tuy, KK's brother, took the microphone from his mother and talked to his brother.
"Mom just wants you to be a better person," Dabson said. "To see what you're doing today, we're just so proud of you. Just keep it positive. I'm sorry you had to see all that pain."
However, the heart rending pain underscored a success story that has been nothing short of miraculous. It is a story that would never happened but for KK's fall.
About 150 people had gathered at Chuco's Justice Center in Inglewood to see the final U.S. performance of Tiny Toones, a hip-hop dance crew, and Cambodian rapper Chan Samnang, also known as K-Dep.
The story of KK and Tiny Toones has received national and international recognition in recent years.
KK was born in a Thai refugee camp and later became a gang member in Long Beach after emigrating to the U.S. with his family. In 2003, after serving a conviction for armed robbery, he was deported to Cambodia, a country he had never visited.
After KK's arrival, kids began asking him to show them dance moves. Eventually, he relented, put his personal despair aside and formed Tiny Toones.
The lure of hip-hop has since been used not only to teach kids break dancing, but provide English language education, HIV/AIDs awareness, gang prevention and other arts and life skills. Through the help of donors and other charities, Tiny Toones now has a drop-in center for impoverished teens and children in Phnom Penh.
The U.S. trip was just the latest remarkable event in the rise of Tiny Toones. Supporters here in the United States were able to secure an invitation and funding to bring six dancers and K-Dep to the U.S. for an international hip-hop dance competition in Madison, Wis., followed by trips to perform in New York, Philadelphia, Seattle and the Southland.
Although the fund-raiser in Inglewood was the group's last performance, plans are already afoot to bring them back next year.
For the dancers, the trip has been magical. Dyrithy Sovann, who goes by the stage name Fresh, said he never dreamed he'd ever see the United States.
Sovann, 17, is particularly adept at one-hand stands and head spins. On Sunday, he was learning the excitement of skateboarding, which the group was first introduced to several days ago.
Sovann met KK four years ago after going with some friends to watch him dance.
At Saturday's performance, Sovann played a lead role in the Monkey Dance, which has become the group's signature piece.
In the dance, the troupe begins with Keo Srey Leak, aka Diamond, the lone girl in the troupe dancing in classical Cambodian style. Gradually, traditional music gives way to hip-hop and the entire troupe launches into a full-fledged tumbling, spinning, hip-hop routine.
In addition to the performances, Tiny Toones dancers have engaged in impromptu cultural exchanges.
In Seattle, they met with a group of first-generation Cambodians from a group called Khmer In Action.
Grace Kong of KIA said the two groups learned much from each other.
Kong said the dancers feared they would be looked down upon and shunned when they came to the U.S.
Instead they have been overcome by the welcome they have received.
"We wanted them to see that no matter what, they have our support, they have Khmer Americans who love them," Kong said.
Information on Tiny Toones can be found online at www.tinytoonescambodia.com.
greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291
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