北大校长林建华为校庆大会念错"鸿鹄"致歉
Peking University President Lin Jianhua has apologized after his mispronunciation of a word at its 120th anniversary celebration triggered online criticism. The word should be pronounced "honghu", indicating birds that can fly high. The president pronounced it as "honghao", which has no meaning. It triggered heated debate online, with some netizens criticizing Lin for not knowing the word and questioning whether he was qualified to be head of one of China's best universities. Lin posted a letter of apology on Weiming BBS, the university's online bulletin board, last Saturday. He admitted in the letter that "I was not familiar with the pronunciation and learned it this time". Some netizens applauded Lin's honest and brave apology, acclaiming him for being "able to face his shortcoming". But others did not accept his apology and said Lin should have been "prepared before reading the speech". Lin, a chemist, said in the letter that despite being university president, he is "not good in literature and may have disappointed students and friends". He said he received a poor education in primary and middle school due to the "cultural revolution" and spent his childhood and youth in a small farm in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region. He barely understood the difference between the subject and verb in a sentence before taking the college entrance exam. "I am not writing this letter to defend my ignorance and mistake, but I want you to know the real me," he wrote. "Your president is not a flawless man. I have shortcomings and deficiencies, and I make mistakes." |