FILE - In this June 8, 1972
file photo, crying children, including 9-year-old Kim Phuc, center, run down
Route 1 near Trang Bang, Vietnam after an aerial napalm attack on suspected
Viet Cong hiding places as …more South Vietnamese forces from
the 25th Division walk behind them. A South Vietnamese plane accidentally
dropped its flaming napalm on South Vietnamese troops and civilians. From left,
the children are Phan Thanh Tam, younger brother of Kim Phuc, who lost an eye,
Phan Thanh Phouc, youngest brother of Kim Phuc, Kim Phuc, and Kim's cousins Ho
Van Bon, and Ho Thi Ting.
TRANG BANG, Vietnam (AP) —
In the picture, the girl will always be 9 years old and wailing "Too hot!
Too hot!" as she runs down the road away from her burning Vietnamese
village.
She will always be naked after blobs of sticky napalm melted through her
clothes and layers of skin like jellied lava.
It only took a second for Associated Press photographer Huynh Cong
"Nick" Ut to snap the iconic black-and-white image 40 years ago. It
communicated the horrors of the Vietnam War in a way words could never
describe, helping to end one of the most divisive wars in American history.
But beneath the photo lies a lesser-known story. It's the tale of a
dying child brought together by chance with a young photographer. A moment
captured in the chaos of war that would be both her savior and her curse on a
journey to understand life's plan for her.
"I really wanted to escape from that little girl," says Kim
Phuc, now 49. "But it seems to me that the picture didn't let me go."
____
It was June 8, 1972, when Phuc heard the soldier's scream: "We have
to run out of this place! They will bomb here, and we will be dead!"
Seconds later, she saw the tails of yellow and purple smoke bombs
curling around the Cao Dai temple where her family had sheltered for three
days, as north and south Vietnamese forces fought for control of their village.
The little girl heard a roar overhead and twisted her neck to look up.
As the South Vietnamese Skyraider plane grew fatter and louder, it swooped down
toward her, dropping canisters like tumbling eggs flipping end over end.
"Ba-boom! Ba-boom!"
The ground rocked. Then the heat of a hundred furnaces exploded as
orange flames spit in all directions.
Fire danced up Phuc's left arm. The threads of her cotton clothes
evaporated on contact. Trees became angry torches. Searing pain bit through
skin and muscle.
"I will be ugly, and I'm not normal anymore," she thought, as
her right hand brushed furiously across her blistering arm. "People will
see me in a different way."
In shock, she sprinted down Highway 1 behind her older brother. She
didn't see the foreign journalists gathered as she ran toward them, screaming.
Then, she lost consciousness.
___
Ut, the 21-year-old Vietnamese photographer who took the picture, drove
Phuc to a small hospital. There, he was told the child was too far gone to
help. But he flashed his American press badge, demanded that doctors treat the
girl and left assured that she would not be forgotten.
"I cried when I saw her running," said Ut, whose older brother
was killed on assignment with the AP in the southern Mekong Delta. "If I
don't help her — if something happened and she died — I think I'd kill myself
after that."
Back at the office in what was then U.S.-backed Saigon, he developed his
film. When the image of the naked little girl emerged, everyone feared it would
be rejected because of the news agency's strict policy against nudity.
But veteran Vietnam photo editor Horst Faas took one look and knew it
was a shot made to break the rules. He argued the photo's news value far
outweighed any other concerns, and he won.
A couple of days after the image shocked the world, another journalist
found out the little girl had somehow survived the attack. Christopher Wain, a
correspondent for the British Independent Television Network who had given Phuc
water from his canteen and drizzled it down her burning back at the scene,
fought to have her transferred to the American-run Barsky unit. It was the only
facility in Saigon equipped to deal with her severe injuries.
"I had no idea where I was or what happened to me," she said.
"I woke up and I was in the hospital with so much pain, and then the
nurses were around me. I woke up with a terrible fear."
Thirty percent of Phuc's tiny body was scorched raw by third-degree
burns, though her face somehow remained untouched. Over time, her melted flesh
began to heal.
"Every morning at 8 o'clock, the nurses put me in the burn bath to
cut all my dead skin off," she said. "I just cried and when I could
not stand it any longer, I just passed out."
After multiple skin grafts and surgeries, Phuc was finally allowed to
leave, 13 months after the bombing. She had seen Ut's photo, which by then had
won the Pulitzer Prize, but she was still unaware of its reach and power.
She just wanted to go home and be a child again.
___
For a while, life did go somewhat back to normal. The photo was famous,
but Phuc largely remained unknown except to those living in her tiny village
near the Cambodian border. Ut and a few other journalists sometimes visited
her, but that stopped after northern communist forces seized control of South
Vietnam on April 30, 1975, ending the war.
Life under the new regime became tough. Medical treatment and
painkillers were expensive and hard to find for the teenager, who still
suffered extreme headaches and pain.
She worked hard and was accepted into medical school to pursue her dream
of becoming a doctor. But all that ended once the new communist leaders
realized the propaganda value of the 'napalm girl' in the photo.
She was forced to quit college and return to her home province, where
she was trotted out to meet foreign journalists. The visits were monitored and
controlled, her words scripted. She smiled and played her role, but the rage
inside began to build and consume her.
"I wanted to escape that picture," she said. "I got
burned by napalm, and I became a victim of war ... but growing up then, I
became another kind of victim."
She turned to Cao Dai, her Vietnamese religion, for answers. But they
didn't come.
"My heart was exactly like a black coffee cup," she said.
"I wished I died in that attack with my cousin, with my south Vietnamese
soldiers. I wish I died at that time so I won't suffer like that anymore ... it
was so hard for me to carry all that burden with that hatred, with that anger
and bitterness."
One day, while visiting a library, Phuc found a Bible. For the first
time, she started believing her life had a plan.
Then suddenly, once again, the photo that had given her unwanted fame
brought opportunity.
She traveled to West Germany in 1982 for medical care with the help of a
foreign journalist. Later, Vietnam's prime minister, also touched by her story,
made arrangements for her to study in Cuba.
She was finally free from the minders and reporters hounding her at
home, but her life was far from normal. Ut, then working at the AP in Los
Angeles, traveled to meet her in 1989, but they never had a moment alone. There
was no way for him to know she desperately wanted his help again.
"I knew in my dream that one day Uncle Ut could help me to have
freedom," said Phuc, referring to him by an affectionate Vietnamese term.
"But I was in Cuba. I was really disappointed because I couldn't contact
with him. I couldn't do anything."
___
While at school, Phuc met a young Vietnamese man. She had never believed
anyone would ever want her because of the ugly patchwork of scars that banded
across her back and pitted her arm, but Bui Huy Toan seemed to love her more
because of them.
The two decided to marry in 1992 and honeymoon in Moscow. On the flight
back to Cuba, the newlyweds defected during a refueling stop in Canada. She was
free.
Phuc contacted Ut to share the news, and he encouraged her to tell her
story to the world. But she was done giving interviews and posing for photos.
"I have a husband and a new life and want to be normal like
everyone else," she said.
The media eventually found Phuc living near Toronto, and she decided she
needed to take control of her story. A book was written in 1999 and a
documentary came out, at last the way she wanted it told. She was asked to
become a U.N. Goodwill Ambassador to help victims of war. She and Ut have since
reunited many times to tell their story, even traveling to London to meet the
Queen.
"Today, I'm so happy I helped Kim," said Ut, who still works
for AP and recently returned to Trang Bang village. "I call her my
daughter."
After four decades, Phuc, now a mother of two sons, can finally look at
the picture of herself running naked and understand why it remains so powerful.
It had saved her, tested her and ultimately freed her.
"Most of the people, they know my picture but there's very few that
know about my life," she said. "I'm so thankful that ... I can accept
the picture as a powerful gift. Then it is my choice. Then I can work with it
for peace."
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