Direct Product of Group Homomorphisms is Homomorphism

Theorem
Let $\left({G, \circ}\right), \left({H_1, *_1}\right)$ and $\left({H_2, *_2}\right)$ be groups.

Let $\left({H_1 \times H_2, *}\right)$ be the group direct product of $H_1$ and $H_2$.

Let $f_1: G \to H_1$ and $f_2: G \to H_2$ be group homomorphisms.

Let $f_1 \times f_2: g \to H_1 \times H_2$ be the direct product of $f_1$ and $f_2$.

Then $f_1 \times f_2$ is a group homomorphism.

Proof
The direct product of $f_1$ and $f_2$ $f_1 \times f_2: g \to H_1 \times H_2$ is defined as:
 * $\forall g \in G: \left({f_1 \times f_2}\right) \left({g}\right) = \left({f_1 \left({g}\right), f_2 \left({g}\right)}\right)$

From External Direct Product of Groups is Group, the group direct product $H_1 \times H_2$ is a group.

It remains to be shown that $f_1 \times f_2$ fulfils the morphism property.

Let $g, h \in G$.

Then: