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Naked Little Teens Photo




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31 Mart 2021 tarihi itibariyle 370 milyondan fazla görselimiz var.

THE image of a naked nine-year-old girl with burning flesh, screaming in agony as she flees a napalm attack in Vietnam, is one that is seared on the world’s memory.
The picture of Kim Phuc – recently voted the most iconic photo of all time – was captured in 1972 and featured on front pages across the globe, bringing home the brutality of war.
Kim – whose clothes were burned off in the chemical attack which killed two of her cousins - suffered third degree burns on her back, arms and legs.
Nearly five decades on Kim, whose story features in the History Channel documentary Photos That Changed The World, reveals she was mortified when she first saw Nick Ut’s picture, 14 months after the attack.
“I said, ‘Why did someone take my picture like that? I was naked and in agony. I was crying,” she says. “I was a little girl and I was embarrassed. I felt ugly.”
But motivational speaker Kim, 56, who now lives in Canada says she feels “lucky” to be the ‘Napalm Girl’ in the picture, despite living with extensive scars and constant pain.
In an exclusive interview with the Sun Online, she reveals her desperate parents found her in a hospital morgue after the attack, and the heartbreaking moment her best friend rejected her after months of treatment.
She also talks about how much it pains her to see children still suffering from chemical warfare in places like Syria today.
Bubbly and effusive, Kim still has a girlish giggle when she talks about her perfect childhood before the attack, when she “felt like a princess.”
Growing up in the tiny South Vietnam village of Trang Bang, with eight brothers and sisters, she says: “My life was so happy and carefree. We had everything, almost.
“I went to school, played with friends and I was such a happy child, always smiling.”
Even though war had raged between North and South Vietnam since 1955, with US troops backing Southern forces, the village remained untouched until the fateful day of June 8, 1972, when the family were told to shelter in the temple from incoming air attacks.
Kim, her brothers and cousins were playing around a bomb shelter when South Vietnamese soldiers yelled for the children to run.
“Then I saw the planes, so loud and fast,” she recalls. “I looked up and saw four bombs landing and then fire everywhere around me.
“My clothes suddenly burned off and my left arm was on fire. I remember thinking, ‘Oh my goodness, I got burnt. I will be ugly."
Terrified, and screaming in pain, Kim ran through the fire and kept running, crying, with her brother beside her, until she couldn't run any more.
A soldier gave her water to drink but she screamed "too hot!" so he tipped it over her, and she passed out.
Nick Ut – the young photojournalist who had snapped the horrific moment – drove her to the nearest hospital.
But after hours of treatment, the doctors said there was nothing more they could do – and when her mum and brother finally tracked her down she was already in the morgue.
“They were going to bring my body back to the village for burial,” she says. “Mum picked me up and carried me to the hospital entrance and a miracle happened.
“My father, who had been looking for me at another hospital, met her at the door where he saw a doctor friend who worked there and asked for help. He saw I was still breathing and transferred me to the Barsky burn clinic in Saigon.”
After 14 months, and 15 operations, Kim was well enough to come home but she was not prepared for the heartbreaking reaction of her closest friend.
“I was looking forward to seeing her and I thought she would run and hug me,” she says. “But it was hot and I wasn’t wearing a top, so she could see my scars and was too scared to come near me. I felt unfit to be loved. That hurt me more than my burns.”
More pain and anger was to follow when, Kim’s dream of studying medicine was dashed.
In the second year of her degree at a Saigon university, the Communist government of Vietnam, realising there was global interest in the girl in the picture, pulled Kim off her course.
She said they "controlled her life", parading her as a triumphant survivor of the war in the media, introducing her to visiting dignitaries and using her in propaganda films.
At 19, she was depressed and suicidal.
“I lost my dream. I lost my future,” she says. “I couldn’t finish my education and because of my deformed scars and pain, I thought I would never get married and never have a normal life.
“I wished at that time, I’d died with my two cousins in those bombs.”
Kim's low self-esteem was worsened by the skimpy clothing other teens wore in the heat.
“I looked at girls wearing short-sleeved tops and they looked so beautiful,” she says.
“But I had to wear long sleeves and my left arm is shorter than my right, as the burns had affected the growth. I hated my life and I hated them.
“There was so much anger and hatred in my heart.”
Kim says her life turned around when she started reading the Bible in her local library, in 1982, and became a committed Christian.
Four years later, after befriending new Prime Minister Pham Van Dong, she was allowed to travel to Cuba to study. It was here she met fellow student Bui Huy Toan and the pair married in 1992.
On their honeymoon, the couple defected to Canada and they have two sons – Thomas, 25, and Stephen, 21. She works as a peace campaigner and goodwill ambassador for the human rights organisation, Unesco,
In the last four years, Kim has undergone 11 laser surgeries in Miami and has been told she will need to have two more, but she still suffers pain on a daily basis.
The Vietnam war which began in 1955, pitted the Communist government of North Korea and it’s Southern allies, the Viet Cong, against the government of South Vietnam, backed by the US.
The US, who had 500,000 troops in South Vietnam at the height of the conflict, withdrew in 1973 and the South fell to the Communist regime two years later.
The human cost of the conflict was immense, with 2 million civilians killed on both sides along with 1.1 million North Vietnamese and Viet Cong fighters.
The U.S. military has estimated that between 200,000 and 250,000 South Vietnamese soldiers died and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. names 58,200 members of U.S. armed forces who were killed in action.
Among the allies of South Vietnam who fought, South Korea suffered more than 4,000 dead, Thailand about 350, Australia more than 500, and New Zealand some three dozen.
The only time Kim's voice cracks with emotion is when asked about the children who suffered chemical burns in the recent attacks on the Kurds in Syria.
“My heart is broken when I see the children who are suffering now,” she says. “I have to do my best to help them because I was one of the millions of children who have suffered in wars.
“Children need to be loved, to have a good education and grow up in a peaceful place.
“We have to work together to lift up the voice of peace. We need to learn from the past to prevent these things happening again and again.”
Despite her initial reaction, Kim says she is now “thankful” to be known as the Napalm Girl and is close friends with Nick Ut who captured the image.
“I see my picture as a powerful gift. War almost destroyed my body, my life and left me with no hope. But now I tell people how beautiful the world could be if everyone learned to live with peace, hope and forgiveness.
“The message from that little girl in the picture is that if I can do it, everyone can do it.”
Photos That Changed The World airs at 10pm on Monday 28th on HISTORY
Invented in 1942, for the US Chemical Warfare Service, Napalm is an explosive mixture of gelling agent and petrol or diesel.
It’s gel-like consistency means it sticks to targets and, once ignited it burns at can burn at more than 2,760 degrees Celsius – 276 times hotter than boiling water.
One firebomb released from a low-flying plane can damage an area of 2,500 square yards (2,100 m2).
Although it was first used by US forces in World War II, Napalm is more associated with the American and South Vietnamese forces during the Vietnam War.
It has not been outlawed as a weapon of war, but a United Nations convention forbids its use against civilian populations.
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