COMMUNICATION
JOURNEY FROM THE PAST Serretta Malaikhamâs look back brings her forward By Shawn Ryan
S
erretta Malaikham remembers sitting in the backseat of a car. She remembers âyelling and bodies falling.â Thatâs all she remembers about the day her father shot her mother and uncle just outside the car, killing them both. He later took his own life. âI think my brain has really tried to push a lot of that out. I think I grew accustomed to hating talking about it,â says Malaikham, who was three years old when the incident occurred. A senior in communications at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, she has started talking about it, a decision that began with a project she completed for Rising Rock, the storytelling class that features pieces written, photographed, videotaped and broadcast by UTC students. In her project, âJourney to Freedom,â she documented the dangerous and terrifying journey her grandparentsâ Manichanh and Khampoon Sonexayarathâmade when they fled their home in the Southeastern Asian country of Laos during the Vietnam War. The Viet Cong were killing anyone they said was disobeying their orders or they thought might be collaborating with the U.S.
âI thought I was going to die. I didnât think I was going to become a person. They were killing everyone from left to right,â Manichanh says in âJourney to Freedom.â Her family eventually made it to Nashville, where they still live. After the death of her birth parents, Malaikhamâs grandparents adopted her. She now calls them Mom and Dad. Her birth mother was the daughter of Manichanh, but the family never talked about the details of her death. She says she doesnât remember anything clearly about her birth parents and knows what they look like only through photographs. Her grandparents donât even know sheâs now talking about the killings at all, she admits hesitantly with a slightly embarrassed smile. âThis is actually the first time Iâve decided to be kind of upfront about my story just because I donât like the whole pity feeling whenever I tell people what happened in my life,â Malaikham says. âI donât let that story define me and I donât want that to be a part of who I am because Iâm way more than just what happened to me when I was three.â She credits the bravery of telling the details of the deaths to Billy Weeks, creator and director of Rising Rock. After she finished âJourney to Freedom,â
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he insisted there had to be more to her grandparentsâ story. âHe said, âIt wasnât just rainbows and sunshine as soon as they got to America.â So then we just had a whole heart-to-heart, and I opened up to him. âHe was honestly the reason why I decided to push more with the story because he was like, âYou shouldnât let your momâs legacy die with you. She deserves to be honored, too.ââ
âSerretta has been able to bring that same kind of compassion to her other communication skills like writing and audio.â âPROFESSOR BILLY WEEKS
Weeks describes her ability to tell stories with photographs as âsimply amazing.â âHer images are always technically sound with beautiful composition, but what her images do best are tell