
The National Park Service of the Ministry of the Interior held a private screening activity for the ecological documentary "Fly! Mountain Hawk-Eagle," led by Director-General Wang, Cheng-gi, who was joined with colleagues, volunteers, and corporate ESG partners. The film, which took director Liang, Chieh-te 12 years to shoot, delicately records the life rhythm of the endangered mountain hawk-eagle, as well as the process of researchers and indigenous peoples coexisting with nature in the mountains and forests.
The National Park Service emphasized that Taiwan's national parks are important sanctuaries for wildlife, and promoting conservation and environmental education is of utmost importance. During the post-screening seminar, the director and screenwriter shared the challenges and emotional moments of the long shooting process, generating an enthusiastic response from the audience.
Through this activity combining cinematic art and ecological education, the National Park Service hopes to solidify consensus on conservation across all sectors of society, transforming the emotion felt for nature into daily actions. In the future, it will continue to promote diversified ecological education, and sincerely invites the public and corporations to step into national parks to experience the beauty of nature, support high-quality ecological documentaries, and work together toward the vision of harmonious coexistence between humans and nature in Taiwan.
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