Mayabeque, Cuba: On Sunday morning, journalist Félix Milián Milián, who served as a correspondent for the Cuban News Agency in the province of Mayabeque, was buried in the cemetery of Bejucal, the Cuban News Agency reports.
Founder in 1978 of the correspondent of the old province of Havana in the then National Information Agency, he stayed for more than 40 years reporting with his inseparable Braille machine from different parts of Cuba and on the most diverse topics of national and international events .
For his example of love for the profession, discipline and sense of duty, he received numerous recognitions, including the Félix Elmusa Distinction, the Raúl Gómez García Medal, and the award For the Work of Life, awarded by the Union of Journalists of Cuba in the province, among other multiple recognitions.
Coming from a very humble family, in the town of La Salud in the municipality of Quivicán, Félix Milián Milián before 1959 sold tickets to be able to look for a livelihood, for which he always expressed his gratitude to the Revolution that allowed him his professional training and to graduate with a Bachelor of Journalism in 1972.
The prominent blind man with a long history in Cuban journalism was active in the ranks of the Communist Party of Cuba for more than four decades. When he died of post-COVID-19 complications, he was 80 years old and he always knew how to find the light in the midst of the shadows that one bad day clouded his life at the age of six
Redacción Digital
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