Growing up in Hyesan, North Korea, a small industrial city near the border with China, Hyeonseo Lee heard plenty about Americans. But never without a modifier. "It was always 'American bastards' or 'American aggressors,'" says Lee, photographed by @moisessaman in Seoul on March 20. When Lee was 13, her school made the obligatory pilgrimage to the Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities. There, Lee and her classmates were told of the 35,000 civilians #NorthKorea says were massacred by U.S. troops at the start of the Korean War in 1950. She was shown where 100 North Korean mothers were separated from their newborns as they cried out for milk. And she was brought to the room where the heartless Americans supposedly fed the babies gasoline instead, before flinging in a match. "I didn’t think Americans were human beings," says Lee, who fled North Korea in 1997 and wrote 'The Girl With Seven Names' about her experience. "I thought they were animals that we had to kill off. That was the brainwashing from age 4." With the stakes so high ahead of Kim Jong Un's planned summit with Donald Trump in May, TIME spoke with defectors from North Korea, negotiators and others from both sides of the #DMZ and the bargaining table to better understand Kim’s motivations, Trump’s aims and the potential consequences of their summit–if it actually happens. Read the full story on TIME.com. Photograph by @moisessaman—@magnumphotos for TIME

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Growing up in Hyesan, North Korea, a small industrial city near the border with China, Hyeonseo Lee heard plenty about Americans. But never without a modifier. "It was always 'American bastards' or 'American aggressors,'" says Lee, photographed by @moisessaman in Seoul on March 20. When Lee was 13, her school made the obligatory pilgrimage to the Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities. There, Lee and her classmates were told of the 35,000 civilians #NorthKorea says were massacred by U.S. troops at the start of the Korean War in 1950. She was shown where 100 North Korean mothers were separated from their newborns as they cried out for milk. And she was brought to the room where the heartless Americans supposedly fed the babies gasoline instead, before flinging in a match. "I didn’t think Americans were human beings," says Lee, who fled North Korea in 1997 and wrote 'The Girl With Seven Names' about her experience. "I thought they were animals that we had to kill off. That was the brainwashing from age 4." With the stakes so high ahead of Kim Jong Un's planned summit with Donald Trump in May, TIME spoke with defectors from North Korea, negotiators and others from both sides of the #DMZ and the bargaining table to better understand Kim’s motivations, Trump’s aims and the potential consequences of their summit–if it actually happens. Read the full story on TIME.com. Photograph by @moisessaman@Magnum Photos for TIME


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