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I was born in 1940, originally a "newspaper teacher", then became a journalist when I officially transferred to Hai Duong Moi newspaper in 1963. At that time, the editorial office only had 5-6 people but "shouldered" enough news for the whole province in each issue.
For me, those early difficult days forged the mettle of a journalist in the East. The rooms with rattan and bamboo blinds, the business trips on rickety bicycles during the destructive war made our pens and the few colleagues in the editorial office sharper.
At that time, in the entire editorial office, only journalist Nguyen Huu Phach (a person working for Hai Duong Newspaper No. 1) had attended a journalism class of the propaganda department. The rest had to study on their own and accumulate experience in journalism. I also did not attend any journalism school, if anything, it was just a few short-term training courses. Therefore, gaining experience was a regular, daily task.
But above all, my colleagues and I, with our love for the profession, have contributed to nurturing Hai Duong newspaper through the most difficult stages.
Therefore, I believe that Hai Duong newspaper and the first generations of journalists have overcome those difficulties and challenges, so there is no reason why the next generation - who are well-trained and have the most modern production materials - cannot continue to build the newspaper in this transitional period, becoming a newspaper strong in both staff and position in the lineup of local Party newspapers.
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No matter where, no matter what name the newspaper has, even if it is no longer called Hai Duong, the people born and raised in Hai Duong, carrying the tradition of Eastern journalism, are still there, still promoting the qualities of honest, sharp, fast - accurate - correct - good journalism.
There are two things that today's generation of journalists should remember: Love for the profession and constant self-study.
Love the profession to live with the profession to accompany the profession throughout the journey. Love for the profession will help journalists overcome the harshness in life, in work to bring good works to the public, recognized by readers. And love for the profession must be like a flame that never goes out.
Self-study is an essential requirement in every profession, but in journalism, it is almost mandatory. Even though equipped with a lot of knowledge, the young generation of journalists still needs to constantly learn, because knowledge is never enough. They need to know how to take advantage of every opportunity to accumulate experience: learn from society, from colleagues, from people around them. The spirit of 'study, study more, study forever' will help journalists enrich their life experiences, be more confident in their work and be ready to take on any assigned task.
NGUYEN THE TRUONGSource: https://baohaiduong.vn/hay-giu-tinh-yeu-nghe-va-khong-ngung-tu-hoc-415244.html
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