President Donald Trump made history Sunday when he stepped over the stone threshold that separates South Korea and North Korea, becoming the first sitting U.S. president to cross the demilitarized zone into the hermit kingdom and meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un. As pundits and politicians awoke Sunday to footage of Trump taking the landmark stroll alongside Kim, many made public statements recognizing its significance and offered up reactions as divisive as Trump’s presidency. Some interpreted the meeting as a watershed moment in denuclearization talks between two countries gripped by hostilities since the Korean War, with Trump’s supporters showering praise on the president for taking what—to them—signified a step toward peace. Critics, meanwhile, blasted the president for his friendly demeanor toward a dictator routinely accused of human rights abuses. In Vatican City, Pope Francis aligned himself with the former camp, saying the meeting “constitutes a step further in the walk of peace, not only on that peninsula but in the entire world” at the end of Sunday Angelus Prayer. Nigel Farage, the right-wing Brexit party leader in the UK, seemingly agreed. “Huge congratulations to President Trump on meeting Kim Jong-un at the DMZ, he is a far better leader…