She was 4 years old and living with her poor family in rural Vietnam when it happened, but when she talks about it 10 years later in her temporary home in Prior Lake, you can tell the memory remains vivid.
Thao Nguyen's voice is small but confident, with just a hint of accent. There is no anger when she talks about how the boy hit her on the head because she wouldn't give him another slice of a clementine, then pushed her into a haystack and set it on fire. Calmly, she gives the horrifying details of being trapped in the haystack as flames burned her face, hair and hands, and how when she ran to her parents they didn't recognize her.
Thao sits on the couch, gesturing with her hands, which are missing several fingers. A pink flower and headband cover up a bald spot; she has curled her hair and painted her toenails pink for an interview. Her face is still a little swollen from recent surgery and stitches cross her face just beneath her eyes. Below the stitches, the skin -- her new skin -- looks smooth and soft. Thao's new face is taking shape, one surgery at a time.
Chuck DeVet, one of the people responsible for Thao's amazing journey, sums up what everybody in the room is thinking: "Thao, you look so beautiful."
"Thank you," she says.
A tale of Minnesota Nice
It all started when DeVet, a retired banker, brought his daughter, Annetta, to Vietnam on an "adventure tour." They witnessed the poverty and vowed to set up a charity to help poor children, which they did in 2002. Humanitarian Services for Children of Vietnam (www.hscv.org) now provides food, clothing, shelter and schooling to hundreds of kids in and near Hanoi.
A couple of years ago, Thao's family brought her to the orthopedic program when Annetta was running the agency there. She tried to find help for Thao in Vietnam, without success. She made a few calls back to the United States, asking doctors for advice. One of them put her in touch with Shriners Hospital in Sacramento, Calif., where she lived with a host family for a few months and got treatment before the DeVets brought her to Prior Lake. Here, the community has adopted Thao as one of their own.