Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - An American female reporter in the Vietnam War reported on the brutality of the US military.

An American female reporter in the Vietnam War reported on the brutality of the US military.

It's Maura, an American journalist.

Maura is an American photojournalist. After the Vietnam War broke out, she was sent to Saigon to cover what most Americans thought was a just war. But with the deepening of the interview, Mora found that countless innocent people had become victims of the war. She decided not to record the bravery of American soldiers with cameras, but to aim at those lives destroyed in the war.

China's boss was very dissatisfied with Maura's work and asked her to change careers immediately. Mora immediately replied: "No matter how grandiose the reason of war is, it is evil in itself ..." Subsequently, Mora was fired. But Maura didn't go back to China. She still used the camera to expose the lies that covered up the truth. The photos of innocent people's blood and tears were sent to the European anti-war media by her, which caused strong repercussions. Soon, the US military decided to expel Mora, a "traitor".

Desperate Mora plans to leave Vietnam for Myanmar. However, as soon as the carriage carrying her left Saigon, she stepped on a mine ... and her body was hastily buried on a hillside. At the end of the war, more and more Vietnamese knew about Mora and held a grand funeral for the American. Someone suggested to Ho Chi Minh that Mora should be deprived of her nationality in order to reveal the truth of the war, and asked the Vietnamese government to increase her Vietnamese nationality. Ho Chi Minh thought for a moment and said meaningfully, "No, she is the daughter of people all over the world, and her nationality is' conscience' ..."