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"Napalm Girl" will receive the final skin treatment 50 years later

"Fifty years later, I am no longer a victim of war, a girl in Napalm, a friend, a helper, and I am now with my grandmother. I have survived for peace. "

Kim Phuc receives a laser treatment by Dr. Jill Waibel at the Miami Dermatology and Laser Institute, Tuesday, June 28, 2022, in Miami. Phuc was the subject 50 years ago of the Pulitzer Prize-winning "Napalm Girl" photo by retired AP photographer Nick Ut. She has been treated since 2015 pro bono at the institute for scars suffered in the June 8, 1972, firebombing of her village during the Vietnam War.
Kim Hook Is undergoing laser treatment by Dr. Jill Weibel in Miami, Dermatology and Laser Institute, Tuesday, June 28, 2022, Miami. Phuc was the subject of the "Napalm Girl" photo by retired Associated Press photographer Nick Ut, who won the Pulitzer Prize 50 years ago. She has been receiving free service at the Institute since 2015 due to the wounds she suffered on June 8, 1972, an incendiary attack on her village during the Vietnam War. Photo by Lynne Sladky/Associated Press

Naked iconic photos were taken in 50 It was a year ago. , 9-year-old Kim Phuc Phan Ti — much of her clothes and skin on her back burned down by napalm — attracted worldwide attention.

The Associated Press photographer Nick Ut's award-winning photo, named "Napalm Girl," is one of the most famous war photographs to date. is. It helped to make the American people oppose the war.

Kim Phuc's recovery required almost two years and 17 surgeries, but years later she was still suffering from severe physical and mental pain.

She states that converting to Christianity as a young woman changed everything. Her photographs, which she once hated to capture all of her pain, were the key to her children's lifelong work, peace and forgiveness.

Phuc writes about what she calls "elephant skin" and some of the ongoing problems caused by her childhood burns, but theNew York Post , Phuc reportswhat he currently has. Her last skin treatment.

With the kindness of Dr. Jill Weibel, a surgeon at the Miami Dermatology and Laser Institute in Florida  , Phuc is part of her back. I received laser treatment at. She is still experiencing prolonged pain.

Her professional treatment began a few years ago. Dr. Weibel knows Hook's history and has done all her work for free.

Her first burns she received as a child were so bad that doctors were convinced that Hook would die.

It was Associated Press photographer Nick Ut who rushed her to the hospital. As he said toToronto Sunat the beginning of June, Ut, then 21 years old, put Phuc in his car, but the hospital they first went to chased them. I tried to pay.

"I took her to a hospital in Saigon and showed her a press pass," Ut said.

"If she dies, my picture will appear on the top pages of all newspapers in the world tomorrow."

"They took her right away."

In this June 8, 1972, file photo, 9-year-old Kim Phuc, center, runs with her brothers and cousins, followed by South Vietnamese forces, down Route 1 near Trang Bang after a South Vietnamese plane accidentally dropped its flaming napalm on its own troops and civilians.
June 8, 1972, File Photo, 9 Years-Center The old Kim Phuc of South Vietnam ran with her brother and cousin after a South Vietnamese plane accidentally dropped a burning napalm to his troops and civilians, followed by South Vietnamese troops on Route 1 near Trang Bang. It went down. Photo by AP Photo, Nick Ut/Toronto Sun

Kim Phuc went into exile in Canada in 1992 and she is still outside Toronto. I live in. She and her husband raised two sons here and now have five grandchildren.

And she and Ut will continue to be her lifelong friends.

Speaker and advocate for children, Phuc is a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador. She founded the Kim Foundation to continue working for her children.

As she told the New York Post, "50 years later, I'm no longer a victim of war. I'm not a girl in Napalm. Now I'm a friend, a helper, and a grandmother. And now I'm surviving in search of peace. "

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