A Pulitzer Prize photo exhibition is being held to capture important moments in modern history, including the horrors of war that have continued all over the world.
You can also meet our painful history.
I'm reporter Han Sang-ok.
[Reporter]
Israel's retaliatory bombing created a large crater among the buildings that collapsed.
People who are devastated because they don't know where to start.
Paramedics moving pregnant women from maternity hospitals destroyed by Russian bombing.
The pregnant woman, who asked to kill her in extreme pain, died 30 minutes after she still gave birth to her child.
Desperate evacuees crossing the Daedong River railway bridge, which was bombed to escape Chinese troops during the Korean War.
The horrors of war are no different anywhere, regardless of time and place.
[Han Myung-sook / Dogok-dong, Seoul: I did that to my child, I have to live in peace, I felt so sorry to see the whole thing today, so I wanted to teach him how important peace is.]
[Reporter]
Familiar images also filled the exhibition hall, including an eagle watching a hungry Sudanese girl representing a Pulitzer Prize, a girl running away from the napalm bomb and a Viet Cong summary execution.
The U.S. protesters who occupied the Capitol in defiance of the presidential election four years ago overlap with Korea recently.
[One Thousand Bo / Pulitzer Prize Photography: The Pulitzer Prize contains the most important issues of the year. History remains the same. But the history of the past comes up new depending on what situation we are in and at what point modern people living today see that picture.
[Reporter]
The Pulitzer Prize Photo Exhibition, where you can see and feel the important historical moments of the past 80 years, runs until March 30.
I'm YTN Han Sang-ok.
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