If you thought your 2nd grade Christmas pageant where you spelled out 'Silent Night' with cardboard letters was impressive, it was nothing compared to the synchronized group performances in North Korea. Every year, thousands upon thousands of dancers, performers and schoolchildren train diligently for the mass games in celebration of national holidays like the birthdays of rulers Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il. The most popular mass games are the main attraction during the Arirang Festival in Pyongyang, when thousands of school children sit in the stands and flip color coded cards in a swift and synchronized movement to create a living mosaic backdrop for the dancers and flag wavers performing below. These amazing photos by German photographer/directer Werner Kranwetvogel show a side of North Korea that most have never seen.

































All i can say is – Awesome. I haven’t seen anywhere such events. Pictures and video are great. Can’t imagine how difficult it was to work with such masses of people.