Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Chit Maung

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Native name
  
ချစ်မောင်

Name
  
Chit Maung

Children
  
Moe Hein

Religion
  
Theravada Buddhism

Resting place
  
Yayway Cemetery

Occupation
  
Journalist

Died
  
1945, Myanmar (Burma)

Nationality
  
Burmese

Role
  
Polit.


Chit Maung

Born
  
1913
Okpho, Thayarwady District, British Burma

Known for
  
Founder of the Journal Kyaw Newspaper

Spouse
  
Journal Kyaw Ma Ma Lay (m. 1938–1946)

People also search for
  
Journal Kyaw Ma Ma Lay, Moe Hein, Maung Thein Dan, Daw Khin Lay Myint, Aung Zeya

Journal Kyaw U Chit Maung (Burmese: ဂျာနယ်ကျော်ဦးချစ်မောင်; MLCTS: hkyac maung; 1913–1945) was a journalist, patriotic writer and worked for Bogyoke Aung San who was the father of Aung San Suu Kyi. He was Chief Editor of New Light of Burma:[1]. Later his own Journal Kyaw Newspaper ( The Weekly Thunderer) was well known in Burma.

He was born in Okpho, Thayarwady District, and studied at Latpatan Town High School. After he passed high school, he started work for Rangoon newspapers and became newspaper. He wrote political novels with the pen name Shwe Lin Yon and adult education novels with the pen name "Thu".

Later, Chit Maung set up his own newspaper called Journal Kyaw Newspaper (ဂျာနယ်ကျော်သတင်းစာ). Its patriotic writing style for the Burmese working class attacked the ruling British colonial government. After World War II, he started Burmese independence activities and was arrested by the British government. He actively participated in Aung San's Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League. Due to poor health, he died at the age of 34 years. He is still considered as a role model journalist in Myanmar. His wife Journal Kyaw Ma Ma Lay wrote her husband's biography, Thu Lo Lu (သူလိုလူ), which was translated into English as A Man Like Him and published.

Journal Kyaw U Chit Maung's eldest son Maung Thein Dan became an actor. His daughter was Dr. Daw Khin Lay Myint, a noted French scholar who died in 2007. She translated her mother's works into French, and some French classics into Burmese. His youngest son was the poet Moe Hein.

References

Chit Maung Wikipedia