Joe Hung
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Joe Hung | |
|---|---|
| 洪健昭 | |
| Representative of Taiwan to Italy | |
| In office 1993–2000 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | February 15, 1932 |
| Died | February 20, 2018 (aged 86) Linkou, New Taipei, Taiwan |
| Education | National Taiwan University (BA) Southern Illinois University (MA) Georgetown University (PhD) |
Hung Chien-chao (Chinese: 洪健昭; February 15, 1932 – February 20, 2018), also known as Joe Hung, was a Taiwanese journalist, diplomat, and translator. He served as a foreign correspondent for the Central News Agency (CNA) from 1974 until 1989, as well as the President of CNA from 1990 until 1992 and chairman from 1992 to 1993 and again 2009 until 2011. Hung also joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs' diplomatic corp during the 1990s. He served as the Representative of Taiwan to Italy from 1993 until 2000.[1][2]
Hung was born on February 15, 1932, in Tamsui, Taiwan, to a professionally successful family.[2][3] His father worked for the Bank of Taiwan branch in Banqiao District.[4] Hung was raised in Taiwan under Japanese rule before and during World War II.[1] As a result, Hung was fluent in Japanese, as well as Mandarin Chinese and English.[1][2] Hung considered his mother language Japanese, followed by English and Mandarin in order of proficiency.[4] He was educated by the Japanese prior to their defeat in 1945 during his sophomore year in high school.[2] He spoke Japanese so fluently that he later served as the Japanese interpreter for President Lee Teng-hui.[2] Hung and his wife only conversed in Japanese at home until the birth of their first child, when they added Taiwanese Hokkien to their household.[2]
Hung studied foreign languages and literature at National Taiwan University and graduated in 1950.[2] He served as an English-language interpreter in the Republic of China Armed Forces for five years, where he coordinated the communications with American troops stationed on Taiwan.[2][5]
Hung moved to the United States, where he earned his master's degree in journalism from Southern Illinois University in 1965.[2] Later, he earned a Ph.D. in history from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., in 1981.[2] His doctoral dissertation, completed under Jesuit priest and historian Joseph Sebes, was titled, "Taiwan under the Cheng family 1662–1683: Sinicization after Dutch rule".[6]