Thursday, May 13, 2010

Congratulations Sothary for your accomplishment!

Sothary Van and Dr. Franklin D. Gaylis review a patient file this month. Van is a Cambodian refugee who escaped from her abusive father and lived on her own for two years. She recently completed her SDSU master’s thesis on blood clot prevention, based on research at Sharp Grossmont Hospital with Gaylis. (Nelvin C. Cepeda / UNION-TRIBUNE)
Sothary Van speaks with Dr. Franklin D. Gaylis at Sharp Grossmont Hospital this month. Van attended Miramar College for two years then transferred to UCLA, where she earned her bachelor’s. She plans to return to SDSU to get a nursing degree, which she says is a necessary step in order to do the clinical research she wants to. (Photo by Nelvin C. Cepeda - UNION-TRIBUNE)

‘Fantastic’ accomplishment by refugee camp survivor

Road to medical research success has been long and challenging

Thursday, May 13, 2010
By Anne Krueger
San Diego UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER (San Diego, California, USA)


Sothary Van’s life could be a movie, with a screenplay covering three continents about a young woman who survived a Cambodian refugee camp, poverty, an abusive father, and life on her own at 16.

Van’s story appears to have a happy ending, with a bachelor’s degree from the University of California Los Angeles and a master’s degree from San Diego State University. She’s hoping for a career in medical research.

Her work on a research paper as part of her master’s program in health administration drew praise from Franklin Gaylis, a Sharp Grossmont Hospital physician who collaborated with her.

“What she’s accomplished is fantastic,” Gaylis said. The paper, developing protocols to help prevent blood clots in patients, is set to be published in the American Journal of Medical Quality next month. The work was funded by a $93,000 grant to the Grossmont Hospital Foundation from the Sanofi-Aventis pharmaceutical company.

“I never thought when I was 18 years old I would have learned so much and be where I am now,” said Van, a 26-year-old Mission Valley resident.

Van, a petite woman with long, dark hair, tells her life story with no visible signs of the emotional upheaval she has gone through.

She was born in a refugee camp on the border of Cambodia and Thailand. When she was 2, her father sneaked her through the jungle to take her to another camp where her grandmother and aunt lived. They had an opportunity to come to the United States, and they brought Van with them.

They moved to Jacksonville, Fla., where they struggled to make do on her aunt’s salary working at a factory. They later moved to Connecticut, and when Van was 10, her dying grandmother asked Van’s father to join them in the United States.

Van, who had no memory of her father, moved in with him and his wife, a woman from Australia whom he had met in the refugee camp after separating from Van’s mother. She said her father was cold and unaffectionate, often yelling and criticizing her.

“He’s very strict, very old-fashioned,” she said. “He was mean. I hated him because he was so mean.”

Her father’s wife wanted to return to Australia, so they moved to Sydney, along with a half brother. Van said the emotional and physical abuse continued, so she ran away from home when she was 16.

She received a small allowance from the Australian government, but struggled to survive while she finished high school. She avoided the drug dealers in her rundown neighborhood, and remembers constantly being hungry.

“Then one day, it just clicked in my head,” Van said. “I’ve got to do something different with my life. I’m not going anywhere.”

A relative put her in touch with her father’s cousin, who lives in San Diego, and Van moved here when she was 18. Mary Mom Keo, a social worker and a devout Buddhist, was the savior Van needed.

“She’s become the mother I never had,” Van said. “Her advice has gotten me far. (She said) ‘Go to school. You’ll always have it. It will take you far.’ ”

After two years at San Diego Miramar College, Van transferred to UCLA, then got her master’s degree last year. She’s now planning to return to SDSU to get a nursing degree, which she says is a necessary step for the clinical research she wants to do.

She said she has reconciled with her father and plans to visit him in Australia in August.

“I felt at peace with him,” she said. “I don’t hate him anymore.”

Van said the obstacles she has faced have made her a stronger person.

“It’s made me very focused and goal-oriented and motivated to do things with my life,” she said.

Anne Krueger: (619) 542-4575; anne.krueger@uniontrib.com

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

Congratulation my dear new scientist khmer generation!
But not Chhuon Chhoeun,Kiev samPhârn,Ieng Sary,Tep Vong,Sihanouk and other communisms.

Anonymous said...

Congratulation my dear..

*stand up ovation*

Anonymous said...

3:11 PM
Why that kind of congratulation.

Sure the women knew very well, what she wanted and no need your advise.

Anonymous said...

good job... come back and work for Cambodia

Anonymous said...

I'm glad to see Khmer on a successful journey.

Anonymous said...

Why so many other Khmer Oversea kids do not follow this lady footstep. So many of them are CHHOR MAR SEITH and do not take their opportunity while they have a chance to settle in the west.

Anonymous said...

congratulations! please keep up the good work and do all required by the school. work hard and smartly; having patience is the key as well. you will go a long way. and do surround yourself with the right people as they can help guide you and take you further into your goal, endeavor, interest, etc... best of luck and god bless.

Anonymous said...

Don't say Khmer oversea kids are Chor Mar seith. It depends on the family roots. If you come from the background like Hun sen, then you're Chor Mar Seith.

A lot of my relatives are in medical field such as doctors, pharmacists, nurses in the US. A lot of Khmer people in the US nowaday are engineers, bankers, teachers,lawyers, doctors, technicians, etc...

It's good for her to get her degree. We have a lot of people doing better than her. I'm not surprised. She has no black hair,but blondy.

Congratulation anyway for your success.

Anonymous said...

Sothary is a great modern Angkorian scientist. Congrats.

Anonymous said...

Eh 10:59 PM,

Have any of your relatives been to West Point like HUN SEN's son?

Anonymous said...

10:59 PM,

I'm not talking about your relatives doing fake degrees/went to cheap schools in the US. I said MANY....

Anonymous said...

SO CHEATA THINK TWICE BEFORE YOU POST ANY THING LIKE THAT AND THE TITLE SHOULD BE:

" A GROUP OF S. Korean Christians praying for Buddhist temple to collapse"

Not just S. Korean..........


Extremis are everywhere in any race, group, or organazation!

Don't just post any thing with stupid title PUSSY HEAD!!!!!!

1:50 AM

Anonymous said...

great to be cambodian born and with highly educated women.
Thank for bring up her story to the world.
Seattle,WA USA

Anonymous said...

11:19PM,

Do you know the requirement to get in to West Point? If you don't, don't BS with me.

Your master, Hun Sen's son, got to the West Point not being the smartest and brightest among West Point students. So why does your second master's son get into West Point again? Is it because he has two smart sons? Don't give me shit about his sons. They're stupid as well. American brings them to West Point because they' re the sons of prime minister and hope they will go back and change their country.

To get into West Point, you need to be top score in high school, get endorse by your congressman or senator, and school. To pass physical and psychological tests. Make good score in SAT.

Do your master's sons get all of those requirements? Nope, dude.

American doesn't just bring your stupid master's sons to West Point, but around the world. They learn or not learn, the school just give them diploma.

Don't BS Hun Sen's sons with me. I don't respect those people as my model.

Anonymous said...

10:59PM,

My relatives do not go to the best known college as yours.

They go to the cheap Universities in the US such as University of Chicago, MIT, UCLA, Yale, John Hopkin, Stanford, Hovard, and UC, Berkely.

Not like your master Hun Sen, PhD, in Rapping, Land Grabbing, Acid Attack, Assasination, logging, etc...

Khmer in US

Anonymous said...

schools are competitive in western world. they are known for their competitiveness and academic rigor. yes, it's about how the schools are run, not the education itself because education is good if you to any universities or colleges in the world, even in cambodia, really! they all have their own set of rules, etc... wake up!

Anonymous said...

You're suppost to read her story and move on...weather you like it or not!Instead,You are making all kinds of nonsenes comparison like she really care!You have to learn how to admirer people that are doing some things good to thenm self or society,"Life is Good"

Anonymous said...

Eh 2:43,

So, do you mean that West Point is stupid to admit Hun Sen's sons into their School?

Anonymous said...

Eh 2:43,

So, do you mean than West is stupid by admitting Hun Sen's sons into their school?

Anonymous said...

There many sucessful Khmer in the U.S. They just did not publish their story in the news. May be she was at the right place at the right time.

Anonymous said...

if you don't understand how west point works, don't pretend to know about it, please. ever thought about west point's policy on exhange students, etc...? remember, manet was a foreign student; west point do admit eligible foreign students through international treaty with cambodia, hello! get educated already, ok!

Anonymous said...

Congrats to Sothary; Im sure her family is very proud of her.

Anonymous said...

Most Cambodian are Diamond in the rough :) Khmer forever

Battambang

Anonymous said...

First of all, congrat!!!!
So true, there are a lot of people in U.S who are very successful, cuz their stories didn't get to be published in the Khmer media.
Second, they are very Americanized!
I hope, Ki Media will publish more successful stories!