Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - North Korea's knowledge composition
North Korea's knowledge composition
After arriving at the border, we set foot on the North Korean train. Three border guards asked everyone to open their bags one by one and check them carefully. One of the women patted my face with a smile. After the inspection, on the way to Pyongyang, I saw green crops and portraits of Kim Il Sung hanging on every platform. When I arrived in Pyongyang, the first thing I saw was a huge portrait of Kim Il Sung hanging high on the roof of the platform. The tour guides who came to meet us were a man and a woman, all wearing Kim Il Sung badges on their chests, with a kind attitude and fluent Chinese. The guide took us into a top hotel in Pyongyang and had dinner. Apart from rice, the staple food there is kimchi, which is spicy and salty and tastes terrible. But they specially prepared scrambled eggs, potato stew and grilled fish for our tour group.
On the second and third days, I visited the bronze statue of Maxima, the Arc de Triomphe, the Wanshoutai Monument, the Dachengshan Martyrs Cemetery, the military demarcation line of the 38th parallel and the former residence of Kim Il Sung. Among them, I am most interested in the "38th parallel". It is a cement road about three meters wide, and a white line is drawn on the outside of the road. Crossing the white line means crossing the border. On this side of the road stood a serious-looking People's Army soldier. Opposite the bungalow where the armistice agreement was signed, black soldiers and North Korean soldiers stood leisurely. The tour guide said that these black people were American soldiers. I accidentally crossed the line when taking pictures. The North Korean officer stopped me loudly, and my father was even more anxious to make a hullabaloo about.
There are spectacular high-rise buildings in Pyongyang, some of which are very strange in appearance. The main streets are wide and tidy, and the Datong River is clear and beautiful. But there are no shops, billboards and bright decorations on the street. At night, most roads have no street lamps. Pedestrians wear Kim Il Sung's badge, and the clothes are mainly black, gray and earth. Few women wear national costumes. This special simplicity is impressive.
The whole trip was full and no free activities were arranged. The adults in the audience said: the Korean people live in poverty, with food, cloth and shoes. They are all rationed, and sometimes they can't fill their stomachs; The situation outside Pyongyang is even worse; The power supply in the country is tight and there are frequent power outages. No wonder, I haven't seen a fat man along the way! But the tour guide told us that although food and clothing are poor, in their country, people are free to see a doctor, go to school and take the bus.
Three days later, we got on the train back to China. Goodbye, a beautiful and poor country! I wish the Korean people early prosperity!
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