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Maung Tha Cho - Future Dreams
Maung Tha Cho - Future Dreams
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The era when women voted
( one)
There is a tutor in Laputta Township. He is a former student of the Institute of Technology. However , he did not get a BE degree. He was away from school for many years and then he got a Bachelor of Science degree through correspondence. His profession is English and Maths teacher. And if he has the heart, he can write. Translate. .
Once, he was teaching a girl from a wealthy family. While teaching English , the word "Widow" came up. He explained it as "widow." He looked at the girl's eyes and was a little suspicious, so he asked her if she knew "widow." The girl said yes, but he didn't believe her. So he asked her, "Tell me, what is a "widow?" The girl's answer confirmed what she believed.
Women hunt, sir.
It is true that not only him, but also I, a guest at Laputa, exclaimed “Ha”. A hunter is a man who hunts. A hunter is a woman who hunts. The girl’s thoughts. I don’t blame this young girl who doesn’t know that a widow is a woman whose husband has died. I don’t think so. I want to blame and belittle her parents who didn’t keep her in touch with society.
Why would you want to lock up a child?
( 2 years)
I would like to briefly introduce the children I have met personally.
Once, in a grammar lesson, the word “turkey” came up. When a little girl asked me what a turkey was, I didn’t really flinch. When three or four other people asked me, I was really shocked. I don’t think a turkey is such a rare creature that children today don’t even see it.
Another time, I encountered the phrase “ Monk flying .” A word from a rural prose piece. Some children understand it as a monk flying in the sky with some kind of power, like a flying bird, a flying pig, a flying tiger, or a flying elephant. They don’t know what a monk’s final funeral is.
I still remember a little girl who asked me, while I was teaching the Sadhanasinmin story, if elephants could talk.
( three)
In a news report from the hotel, Eric Schwab, CEO of Google, a world-famous computer company, gave a speech to 6,000 students at the commencement ceremony of the University of Pennsylvania in the United States, saying things like, "Turn off your computer. Get out of the material world. Connect with people." I deeply support this.
It is a great mistake for some of our parents to think that it is enough to feed their children well, clothe them well, and let them sit and watch the world through television and computers.)
The best school is a society, and by interacting with people, we can learn everything, including the rich magic and subtleties of the world. Just by touching daily life a little, everyone can easily understand what kind of animal a turkey is, what kind of ceremony a monk is, and what kind of woman a widow is. Why do some parents ignore this? Be aware that you are creating a world for your children to live in.
It is something every parent should be aware of so that women don't reach the age of hunting.
7-7-2009
Maung Tha Cho (1958- )
Born on March 11, 1958 in Kwuncheon Township, Yangon Region to U Win Thein, a merchant, and Daw Tin, his real name is Nyunt Thaung. He is the eldest of three siblings. He studied from kindergarten to fourth grade at Kwuncheon Township, Kwuncheon Township, and from fifth to sixth grade at A.H.K.(1) Kwuncheon Township. He studied from seventh to eighth grade at A.H.K.(1) North Okkalapa, Yangon. He studied from ninth to matriculation at A.H.K.(1) North Okkalapa. In 1977, he continued his education at Yangon Regional College and Yangon University of Arts and Sciences with Burmese as the main language and obtained a BA (Burmese) degree. He has also worked as an instructor in the Burmese Department at Yangon University of Arts and Sciences, and has also worked at Workers' College, University of Foreign Languages, Meiktila University, and Hinthada University. Now | He is currently working as a lecturer at the University of Education.
Maung Tha Cho entered the literary world in 1974, when he was a 9th grade student, with the poem “New Love” in Thaung Biad Khla Magazine. From 1977-78, he continued to write articles, essays, short stories (Chit Keng Saek), and poems in Ngwe Tari, Shuma Wa, and Moe Wai magazines. In 1988, he served as the editor of “Dream Phu” magazine and published a magazine called “Rasathew” with Yamon, Nay Sim, and Khin Lun. He began writing humor and satire articles under the pen name “Jack Kwan Chan Kone” in the movie magazine of editor Win Nyein. He continued to write in Mingalar Magazine, Ma Hay Thi Magazine, and movie poetry magazines. In 1999, he won the Friends of the Book Award for his article “Reading for My Daughter,” and in 1997, he won the Mandalay Readers’ Choice Award for his article “The Stars in Front of Us in Flashes.” In 2000, he was awarded the Taungoo Mawkun New Literary Award for his book “The Way of Lanka”; in 2004, he was awarded the Htan Yeik Nyo Literary Award for his book “The Road of Lanka”; and in 2009, he was awarded the Tun Phong Dae Shin Literary Award for his book “The Collection of Articles for My Daughter to Read.” Now , he broadcasts “The Articles for My Daughter to Read” on Mandalay FM and “The Satires of Jack Kwan Changone” on Cherry FM.
The books that have been published include "For My Daughter to Read", "A Boat to the Mouth of the Sea", "Dreams Never Come Close", "The Road to Lanka", "The Scenery of the Heart", "Velvet Sail on the Silk Sea", "The Stars We See Before Us", "The Green Family", "The Shop of the World of Gratitude", "The Moon of the North and the Magical Roads on the Northern Hills", and "Unseen Fates in Thaputu Village", "The Goat That Will Be Touched", "Jack in the Journal", "They Only Laugh", "The Laughter That Will Never End", "The Crack of a Pot", "Pull the Lock on the Elephant Mountain", "It's Good to Not Say It, It's Good to Not Hear It", "50 Jack Books" written by Jack Kuangchan Kone.
In addition to magazines and journals (7 Day Journal, Popular Journal, True Journal, Modern Time Journal), Maung Tha Cho also writes articles on social issues, pictures, literature and art, as well as poetry, essays, and short stories. He lives with his wife Daw Khin Thet Swe, daughter Ma Taw Ya Phu, and son Khun Tay Za at No. 173, Okka 6th Street, Ward (C), North Okkalapa Township .







