Vietnam.vn - Nền tảng quảng bá Việt Nam

Stories with General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong at Communist Magazine

Việt NamViệt Nam23/07/2024


I still remember, around the end of 1986, I had just graduated from the Faculty of Literature of Hanoi University, and was on probation at the Experimental Education Center of Professor Ho Ngoc Dai, when I was asked by Professor Nguyen Hung Vi to come and meet me.

As soon as he saw me, Mr. Vi asked: "Do you want to work for the Communist Magazine ?". I was still surprised because the name of the Communist Magazine was too big for a new graduate, then he continued: "Mr. Nguyen Phu Trong also studied at our Literature Department, is currently a leader at the Communist Magazine , and was invited by us to teach journalism to students of the Literature Department. Mr. Trong asked me to find a good graduate student for him to consider and bring to the Magazine to work, I immediately thought of Thien."

At that time, I also thought about leaving the Experimental Education Center to find another opportunity because I felt it was not suitable, so when I heard that, I didn't think much and quickly nodded.

The next day, the teacher and student cycled to the Communist Magazine at 1 Nguyen Thuong Hien, entered the living room and waited. A moment later, a man of average height, gray hair, wearing a Soviet flight jacket, and white glasses, walked in with a smile. That was my first meeting with Mr. Nguyen Phu Trong. I don't know why, but when I met him, I greeted him as uncle, even though he wasn't much older than me. Maybe it was because of his gray hair and calm demeanor, which gave the other person a feeling of closeness but not casualness.

The meeting that day was quite brief. He asked me a few questions about my family background, my studies at the Faculty of Literature, my wishes and plans for the future, briefly introduced me to the Communist Magazine and the work there, and told me to think about it and learn more.

Overview of the working session of General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong with the Editorial Board of Communist Magazine on June 9, 2012. Photo: Communist Magazine

Knowing that he had just started teaching journalism in the Literature department, I asked permission to attend because my knowledge of journalism at that time was zero. Both he and Mr. Vi happily agreed and encouraged me to attend.

After that day, I invited Dang Nam, a classmate in the Literature department who was doing a journalism internship at the Youth Radio program of the Central Youth Union (now the Director of the Department of Children, Ministry of Labor, Invalids and Social Affairs) to join me in the study.

I remember that it was a journalism topic that Mr. Trong taught to the 30th class of the Faculty of Literature (the class of Minister of Education and Training Nguyen Kim Son and journalist, poet Nguyen Tien Thanh, current Chairman and General Director of the Education Publishing House). Here, I learned the basic introductory concepts of journalism: news, reportage, investigation, editorial, treatise, commentary, working methods, news processing... along with the contents of the Party and State's guidelines and policies on journalism.

After each class, from Thuong Dinh, I often cycled home with Mr. Trong. The streets in Hanoi were still deserted at that time, so we rode side by side and chatted happily. At that time, I asked him: "Where does your wife work?", he replied: "My wife works at the Hai Ba Trung District Police", and added with a smile: "Our family always firmly grasps the dictatorship of the proletariat".

Then, through many procedures, in early 1987, I was accepted into the Communist Magazine with my first job as an editor in the Secretariat. I say editor for prestige, but in fact, my job was to proofread, check for errors, and correct mistakes.

That was the job I did for 2 years as a way to train cadres of the Communist Magazine (from the most basic, simple kitchen work of journalism) before being transferred to the professional department. I was so absorbed in this job that to this day, when texting, I still have to use uppercase and lowercase letters, with full semicolons, otherwise I feel uncomfortable.

At that time, the Communist Magazine was the political theory organ of the Party Central Committee, equal to the ministerial level, but the entire editorial office had less than 60 people, and all were equally poor, so there was always a close-knit, warm, and harmonious family atmosphere.

General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong writes in the guestbook at the Communist Magazine's Traditional Room, June 9, 2012. Photo: Communist Magazine

During the subsidy years (before 1990), in the Journal campus, between two high-rise buildings, there was a level 4 house - called the clubhouse - which had an old ping pong table. During the day, this table was set up for people to park their bicycles. In the afternoon, it was installed for brothers, uncles and nephews to play ping pong. Mr. Trong also often joined in the game or cheered with everyone.

On Tet holiday, to help people improve their lives, the agency asked an officer from Nam Dinh to return to his hometown to raise a pig, and bring it up near Tet to cook for everyone to eat, it was delicious and fun.

Another thing, when I first joined the Magazine, registering my household was my top concern, because only with a household registration could I get a rice purchase book. One morning, Mr. Trong met me in the yard and handed me a blue book and said: "Thien's household registration, Ms. Man has finished it for you, send it to Thien!". I received the household registration book from his hands, feeling so moved that I couldn't speak.

Mrs. Ngo Thi Man, his wife, is a police lieutenant colonel, in charge of the household registration team of the Hai Ba Trung District Police. Not only me, but many men who joined the agency before me were also helped by her to complete household registration procedures (a very difficult and complicated task at that time) smoothly and quickly.

The Communist Magazine has a very favorable headquarters, on Nguyen Thuong Hien and Tran Binh Trong streets, and has two large collective houses (actually two old villas from the French colonial period) for generations of cadres before me to live in, which are 61 Nguyen Du and 16 Nguyen Thuong Hien. Mr. Trong's family lives at 16 Nguyen Thuong Hien, in a 20m2 room on the 3rd floor. On the 2nd floor below his house is the family of two leading cadres of the Magazine, who are Mr. Trong's seniors: Mr. Nguyen Trong Thu - Head of the International Department and Mr. Vu Xuan Kieu - Head of the Economic Department.

At that time, Ho Bat Khuat and I were still single, and the agency arranged a dormitory on the first floor of the headquarters. On Sundays, I often went to 16 Nguyen Thuong Hien, to visit the uncles and aunts' houses, friendly and happy.

I returned to the Communist Review in 1987, after the 6th Party Congress. The new editor-in-chief of the Review was literary theorist and critic Ha Xuan Truong, who was from the same hometown as me in Ha Tinh, an alternate member of the Party Central Committee and former Head of the Central Committee's Culture and Arts Committee. Mr. Truong replaced Mr. Hong Chuong, a veteran journalist who had moved to become Chairman of the Vietnam Journalists Association.

Mr. Trong was promoted from Deputy Head of the Party Building Department to Head of the Department (1987), Deputy Secretary of the Party Committee of the agency. At that time, he was already a star at the Magazine. Everyone in the editorial office naturally considered him the future Editor-in-Chief, without any debate. Besides his erudition and solidity in his profession, he always showed leadership qualities.

Maybe it was the authority of a leader that radiated from him, even though he was always calm and gentle when interacting, hardly ever raising his voice or yelling at anyone, even when faced with tense and tense situations in the office. Maybe it was his leisurely, dignified demeanor, his ability to speak and direct with coherent, concise, and clear thinking, his flexibility and moderation. However, when working, one would understand that he was also a very principled and consistent person in handling work. When it came to principles, he always had a strict, uncompromising attitude.

I remember, when I returned to the Communist Review and even before, the Review often added very few staff, only taking one person every few years. About 4 or 5 years after I returned, faced with the need to develop the Review, Mr. Trong decided to recruit a batch of young staff, about a dozen people, for training. After that, he opened a knowledge training class for this batch of staff, inviting veteran theorists, journalists, and lecturers to teach.

At that time, I thought that I had been at the office for a long time and had attended several classes of the Journalists Association, so I expressed that I did not need to attend this class anymore. When the story reached him, he immediately called me into his office and scolded me: “ You have only been working for a few years, your knowledge and understanding are better than anyone else, but you are so arrogant and do not need to attend anymore. You are the senior class (I am the secretary of the Youth Union), you have to set an example for the next class. If you do not attend, I will discipline you! ” After hearing this, I broke out in a sweat, apologized to him and attended the class seriously.

There are many stories that seniors in the Magazine told me about him. For example, after the 4th Party Congress, Mr. Le Duc Tho, Secretary of the Party Central Committee, Head of the Central Organization Committee, asked the Magazine to prepare for him an article with a guiding nature on the Party's personnel work. The task was passed from the Editor-in-Chief, Deputy Editor-in-Chief to the Head of the Committee and finally assigned to Mr. Trong. The article was written by Mr. Trong, submitted to the levels of the Magazine, then to Mr. Le Duc Tho's Office. Mr. Tho reviewed it and "corrected only 2 words" ( the person who told me ) and approved it for publication. Later, during a meeting with the Magazine's leaders, talking about the article, Mr. Tho praised the good quality and asked: "The person who wrote this article must be at the level of the Head of the Committee at the Magazine, right?" At that time, Mr. Trong was just a young Editor in the Party Building Committee.

The seniors at the Journal also recounted that the person considered to have the greatest impact and influence on Mr. Nguyen Phu Trong's political career was Mr. Dao Duy Tung, the longest-serving Editor-in-Chief of the Communist Journal (and Deputy Head of the Central Propaganda Department from 1965 to 1982), before becoming Head of the Central Propaganda Department and Permanent Secretary of the Secretariat (term VII). It was Mr. Dao Duy Tung, a key leader in ideology and theory of the Party at that time, who discovered and nurtured the "Nguyen Phu Trong factor" from a young cadre to become a potential leader of the Journal and of the Party later on.

In 1989, from the position of Head of the Board, Mr. Trong was promoted to Member of the Editorial Board, then Deputy Editor-in-Chief (1990) and Editor-in-Chief (1991). In 1994, he was elected to be a member of the Party Central Committee and in 1997, he was elected to be a member of the Politburo. A rather special thing in Mr. Trong's political life is that when he entered the Central Committee or the Politburo, he was elected mid-term.

In 1996, he left the Communist Magazine to become Deputy Secretary of the Hanoi Party Committee, ending his 30-year journey of dedication to the Party's theoretical and political magazine. 30 years of both journalism and theoretical research have prepared him with a solid foundation to embark on a new journey, the journey of a politician, a great leader, who has created changes and indelible marks in the history of the Party and the country.

Talking about Mr. Trong, we cannot help but mention his family, his wife, Mrs. Ngo Thi Man, and their two children, one boy and one girl.

General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong and his wife Ngo Thi Man took a souvenir photo on The Huc Bridge, after releasing carp according to traditional customs at Hoan Kiem Lake, Hanoi, when attending the 2019 Homeland Spring Program. Photo: Quang Vinh

During my years at the Magazine, everyone in the office, especially the women, had special respect and affection for Mrs. Man, a sincere, gentle, kind woman, always ready to help everyone.

Mrs. Man is a model of a humble woman who stands behind the scenes, helping her husband succeed. The modest, simple, and sincere lifestyle of the couple also influences their two children. Whether when Mr. Trong was still at the Magazine or when he had reached the highest leadership positions of the Party and the country, I still received the same attitude when meeting Mrs. Man and her two children: humble, sincere, cheerful, without pretense, color, and without intentionally creating distance.

During these days, from the time I first heard unofficial information about his health until the official announcement of his passing, I felt a real sense of loss and sadness, as if I had lost a loved one. Of the thirteen years I worked at the Magazine, I worked under him for nine years, and he taught and guided me in many ways, although I learned very little from him.

Flooding social media these days are lines of grief and sadness at the news of his death. That is the people's heart (something that is not easy to come by) for a leader whom people trust and love not only for his purity, integrity, simple lifestyle, closeness to the people, and respect for the people, but also for his steadfastness and dedication to his country. Although there are still many unfinished tasks and many wishes (of the people) that he has not yet fulfilled, a human life is finite.

The ancients said: "The official determines the theory", or as a sentence of poet Khuong Huu Dung in the poem about Nguyen Ai Quoc and Phan Boi Chau: " Closing the coffin lid to open history ". With a proud career, with strong and indelible marks, with policies and decisions that "shock the heavens and the earth", which can change the whole history of him, future history books will write a lot, a lot about him.

At this moment of sorrow, I would like to send my deepest and most sincere condolences to the family of General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong. I hope that after the General Secretary has put down the burden of the country, he will rest in peace and tread lightly into the white clouds.

Vietnamnet.vn

Source: https://vietnamnet.vn/nhung-cau-chuyen-voi-tong-bi-thu-nguyen-phu-trong-o-tap-chi-cong-san-2304581.html


Comment (0)

No data
No data
Admire the million-year-old Chu Dang Ya volcano in Gia Lai
It took Vo Ha Tram 6 weeks to complete the music project praising the Fatherland.
Hanoi coffee shop is bright with red flags and yellow stars to celebrate the 80th anniversary of National Day September 2nd
Wings flying on the A80 training ground
Special pilots in the flying formation to celebrate National Day September 2
Soldiers march through the hot sun on the training ground
Watch helicopters rehearse in the sky of Hanoi in preparation for National Day September 2
U23 Vietnam radiantly brought home the Southeast Asian U23 Championship trophy
Northern islands are like 'rough gems', cheap seafood, 10 minutes by boat from the mainland
The powerful formation of 5 SU-30MK2 fighters prepares for the A80 ceremony

Heritage

Figure

Business

No videos available

News

Political System

Destination

Product