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Ady Jean-Gardy born in Haiti , is a reformist and international press activist. He became Minister of Communication in Haiti (2012–13), after a brilliant experience as Chief of Staff of the Haitian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He deeply designed reforms for public communication without propaganda, respecting the human rights organizations and positioned Haiti as a powerful member of the African Union at Addis Ababa (Ethiopia). He worked to end civil wars in Africa and promoted a new image of Haiti as an International leader for peace. Ady Jean Gardy is also the founder of the Haitian Press Federation, an umbrella organization for various Haitian press associations. He founded the Haitian University of Journalism and Social Communication or the Haitian Center for Teaching Journalists. He contributed to the modernization and the revitalization of the Haitian media world. He took part in many training missions in West Africa and worked to establish the African Press Federation (Fédération de la Presse Africaine – FPA) along with various press leaders from Mali, Togo, Benin, Senegal, Ivory Coast, Congo, Madagascar, Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria. The Conference of Ouagadougou in 2004 devoted the wishes of the founder of this great structure, through the unconditional support of the honorable Daniel Whitman of the State Department. ==Early life and education== After his elementary school at the Catholic school of the Salésiens Fathers led by the Dutch priest Arthur Bonhenn, Ady Jean-Gardy entered Alexander Pétion High School. He began his journalistic career at the age of 12 years of age as a caricaturist on the Creole newspaper ''Bon Nouvel'' directed by the Belgian priest Jorris Ceuppens. At 14 years old he wrote a novel ''Deblozay'' in Creole who was worth the Price of National Creole Media. He also wrote ''Poems of my Seventeen Years'' published by Henri Deschamps's Editions, soon after became Cultural Affairs Director of the Haitian intellectual magazine ''Petit Samedi Soir'' and editor of a libertarian review ''Inter Jeunes''. After high school, he was granted a scholarship by President Léopold Sédar Senghor of Senegal and studied in the field of Communications and of Journalism in Dakar, Senegal. On his return to Haiti he was named at 20 years old, manager of Haiti TV (cable television) under the direction of American Edward B. Hatton. He continued studying Communication of Mass Media at the Institute of Washington, and Social Communication at the University of Chicago. He pursued his higher learning in Haiti at the Institute of Linguistics Applied, studied Architecture at the Civil Engineering Institute of Richard Leconte and finally obtained a bachelor's degree in economics at the Institute of the Economic Science and Politics in Haiti. Classified among the first class honors, he won a USAID scholarship to study at the University of Pittsburgh Economy, Finance and Administrative Management. Returning to Haiti, he followed courses at the Center of Sociology and Psychology by Canadian Prof Yves Bergeron, and of the correspondence courses from the French Institute of Modern History Paris. He also carried out a course on the teaching modern media studies at the International Training Centre, Cologne, Germany. He has a PhD in communication, Masters in Economics Political Science, a Masters in Administration and Management, a BA in Modern History, a Diploma of Applied Linguistics, a Diploma in Fine Arts, and a Diploma in Sociology and Social Psychology. He participated in the International Movie Prize, the Berlin's Futura Price in the Federal Republic of Germany, and he obtained the Caribbean's prize for a documentary film ''Christmas in vodoo colors''. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Ady Jean-Gardy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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