feeling village. pung moon jam. there are basically these buildings. half is in north korea, halve is in south korea. the table is the middle. two sides would do when they were talking they would sit at the table. one would sit on the north side. one would sit on the south side. that s how they communicated and the signed the armistice that put the korean war on pause but never initially ended the korean war. that s one of the contentious issues still facing the two koreas to this day. so for somebody to actually walk across, it s not actually it s not a very long distance they would have to travel. you re talking about a matter of a few footsteps. now there are armed soldiers that are there. this is called this is called the demilitarized zone. but dmz is anything but demilitarized. it s a very dangerous area if you step off course, there s mines. the of course the soldiers carry weapons. there are sniper towers. this is not a place somebody would want to casually walk around.
there are also sniper towers. it could be a dangerous situation. if they were indeed at panmunjom village, half the building in the north, half in the south, and if you go inside you see where they had negotiations between the north and south and sitting on their representative sides many decades ago when they signed the armistice that put a cause on the korean war that s in effect this day. the two correass are still at war. they have just stopped the fighting which after several million people died and basically there was no no no no land gained or lost. you had millions of people who died in that war. a lot of americans don t think about it, they think about world war ii. they don t think about the north korean war. they have museums dedicated to it, they have their own version of history, say america started