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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
World
Jonathan Kaiman

At a school for orphans in North Korea, wall decor is all about tanks and missiles

PYONGYANG, North Korea _ Not far from Pyongyang's massive Communist monuments, government offices and propaganda murals _ most depicting the country's two deceased leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il _ lies the Orphan Primary School, a pristine, state-run institution that provides some insight into how the country exists the way it is.

The school on its surface is impressive. On a government-led tour Thursday, a few dozen healthy-looking children were playing soccer, singing songs and reciting lessons in perfect unity. The school had a well-tuned piano, a well-stocked pantry, even a taxidermy room for animal science lessons. Yet, the school raised red flags for two reasons: one, that most North Koreans cannot afford such luxuries, and the government was clearly only showing us what it wanted us to see. And two, it was a propaganda machine.

One wall poster illustrated a patriotic fable about a humble porcupine overcoming a fearsome tiger _ a not-so-subtle allegory for North Korea's view of its relationship with the U.S. Another showed a cartoon of joyous-looking children next to an intercontinental ballistic missile launch. In the kitchen, a cook told us that Kim Jong Un, the country's current top leader, once visited the school.

"He encouraged us to care a lot for the children, and asked us to look after the children," she said.

What that must sound like through the ears of a child. Kim would naturally be worthy of worship. If not for him, would anybody be encouraged to care?

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