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Teine ma Tama Samoa Unitec

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Talofa on this cold blustery rainy day. Paki Paki to these Samoan students who are fundraising for the Samoan Students at Unitec.

They were cooking  their sausage sizzle at Pt Chevalier Mall. I like their cheerfullness and when I asked if I could write a blog about them, they are very happy.

Desiree Amy their spokesperson told me they deal with study groups and social events to benefit Unitec students.

Their next event is Teuila Festival,  8th October 2014. It is the National festival created by students for students.

Teine ma Tama Samoa Unitec


Sue, my Samoan friend.

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It must be fate

On Friday, I meet a group of 

Samoan Unitec students. 

Today, I talk to Adele for 

the first time in church for the first time..


Samoa has a special place in my heart. 

I had aSamoan wedding dress.



Yester-year, Sue and I were good friends, we were also neighbours in Scalan Street, Grey Lynn in late 1970s. Sue was from Samoa. 

When she knew I had no money to buy a wedding dress, she told me about the Samoa way where the brides have wedding dresses given by their aunties. Sue asked if I minded borrowing her cousin dress. She assured me that the dress has not been worn, as her cousin had 12 dresses. She said I didn't have to pay anything, but would I invite her cousin to the wedding. The cousin even gave me a wedding gift.

Sue made sponge cakes for my wedding reception. She told me that we have to be very quiet and not slam the doors, otherwise the cakes would fall flat.

I miss you, Sue. I wonder if you are still in New Zealand or are you back in Samoa.

I ask my students to ask Mum if they know Sue.


Auckland City Libraries circulating my books.

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I am over the moon, the Auckland city libraries are circulating all my book.
 
 

 
Publish info:
Auckland : Ann Kit Suet Chin, 2013.
Subject:
21st century, New Zealand fiction
Found:
Ann (3) chin (3) kit (3) suet (3)
» Check availability
Small Cover Image
Publish info:
Auckland : Ann Kit Suet Chin, 2014.
Subject:
21st century, New Zealand fiction
Found:
Ann (3) chin (3) kit (3) suet (3)
» Check availability
Small Cover Image
Publish info:
[Auckland, N.Z. : Ann Kit Suet Chin-Chan, 2013]
Subject:
Family, History, Chinese, Chin, AnnKitSuet, Chan family, Kong family, 20th century, Malaysia
Found:
chin (9) Ann (5) kit (5) suet (5)
» Check availability
Small Cover Image
"This is a real life story of losing one's only son. This experience has made the author strong and caring. This tragedy has been a great…
Publish info:
[Auckland, N.Z.] : A.K.S. Chin, 2011.
Subject:
Psychological aspects, Diaries, Loss (Psychology), Parents of terminally ill children, Bereavement, Chin, AnnKitSuet, New Zealand
Found:
chin (5) Ann (4) kit (4) suet (4)
» Check availability

"This is a real life story of losing one's only son. This experience has made the author strong and caring. This tragedy has been a great…
Publish info:
[Auckland, N.Z.] : A.K.S. Chin, [2011]
Subject:
Psychological aspects, Diaries, Loss (Psychology), Parents of terminally ill children, Bereavement, Chin, AnnKitSuet, New Zealand
Found:
chin (5) Ann (4) kit (4) suet (4)
» Check availability

 

My Book CV

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Auckland University library, Sarawak Council libraries and the Auckland city libraries are circulating all my books.
 

Publish info:
Auckland : Ann Kit Suet Chin, 2013.
Subject:
21st century, New Zealand fiction
Found:
Ann (3) chin (3) kit (3) suet (3)
» Check availability
Small Cover Image
Publish info:
Auckland : Ann Kit Suet Chin, 2014.
Subject:
21st century, New Zealand fiction
Found:
Ann (3) chin (3) kit (3) suet (3)
» Check availability
Small Cover Image
Publish info:
[Auckland, N.Z. : Ann Kit Suet Chin-Chan, 2013]
Subject:
Family, History, Chinese, Chin, AnnKitSuet, Chan family, Kong family, 20th century, Malaysia
Found:
chin (9) Ann (5) kit (5) suet (5)
» Check availability
Small Cover Image
"This is a real life story of losing one's only son. This experience has made the author strong and caring. This tragedy has been a great…
Publish info:
[Auckland, N.Z.] : A.K.S. Chin, 2011.
Subject:
Psychological aspects, Diaries, Loss (Psychology), Parents of terminally ill children, Bereavement, Chin, AnnKitSuet, New Zealand
Found:
chin (5) Ann (4) kit (4) suet (4)
» Check availability

"This is a real life story of losing one's only son. This experience has made the author strong and caring. This tragedy has been a great…

FSO: Stones

Day of the Dead

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Day of the Dead (Spanish: Día de Muertos) is a Mexican holiday observed throughout Mexico and around the world in other cultures. The holiday focuses on gatherings of family and friends to pray for and remember friends and family members who have died. It is particularly celebrated in Mexico where the day is a bank holiday. The celebration takes place on October 31, November 1 and November 2, in connection with the triduum of Allhallowtide: All Hallows' Eve, Hallowmas, and All Souls' Day.[1][2] Traditions connected with the holiday include building private altars called ofrendas, honoring the deceased using sugar skulls, marigolds, and the favorite foods and beverages of the departed, and visiting graves with these as gifts. They also leave possessions of the deceased.

My World/outdoor Wednesday: My Bro Joseph

FSO/Alphabe-Thursday Letter W for winner animal


Sunday stills: Letter C

FSO: Moody

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We have foggy mornings.

Thursday, October 16, 2014


Moody [Friday My Town Shoot Out] [Link-up]

The fall season is here. And while for some the weather is sunny and great, other experience the grey side of autumn. What does your town or city look like during moody weather? Show us landscape sin your vicinity, lonely mountain roads, or perhaps a cloudy day over the city. Let your imagination run wild!

Sunday Stills, the next challenge: Fall Foliage

Halloween [Friday My Town Shoot Out]

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  Day of the dead party.

So proud of my nephew.
Josh is running a SOS campaign and raising money against sex slavery. He is doing it at a shopping Centre tonight. And also he has been voted as Head Prefect for his college in 2015




So proud of my nephew.
Josh is running a SOS campaign and raising money against sex slavery. He is doing it at a shopping Centre tonight. And also he has been voted as Head Prefect for his college in 2015


http://www.thea21campaign.org/index.php 

Human Trafficking is modern-day slavery

Human trafficking fuels the growth of organized crime, undermining health, safety, security, and the basic needs of humanity. It is the fastest growing crime in the world.

A21 EXISTS TO ABOLISH INJUSTICE IN THE 21ST CENTURY.

We are a non-profit organization who believes that together, we can end human trafficking. 
 Here is our strategy:

PREVENTION

A21 prevents human trafficking through awareness and education.Read more

PROTECTION

A21 protects victims of human trafficking through restoration programs.more

PROSECUTION

A21 pursues justice by prosecuting human traffickers. more

PARTNERSHIP

A21 partners with people just like you to fight for freedom together.Learn more


This is a different theme to what sends you a fright down your spins. Sex trafficking and slavery of little girls.





Thursday, October 30, 2014


Halloween [Friday My Town Shoot Out] [Link-up]

From pumpkins to jack-o-lanterns, from lonely fields to spooky ruins, what can you show us from your town that will send a fright down or spines?


This is a different theme to what sends you a fright down your spins. Sex trafficking and slavery of little girls.




Books by Ann Kit Suet Chin-Chan

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Books by Ann Kit Suet Chin-Chan




From China to Borneo and Beyond

From China to Borneo and Beyond (Trade Paperback/Paperback)

  • RRP: NZ$35.00

This is a hundred-year-old journal of two families, the Chans and the Kongs. It traces the first movement in 1907 from Kwang Zhou, China to the jungles of Borneo. It is a six-generational record with the second wave of movement to England, Canada, Japan, Singapore, Australia, USA ...
ISBN9780473239008
Published1 January 2013
Interest AgeAll ages




Mail Order Bride

Mail Order Bride (Paperback)

  • RRP: NZ$35.00

This book is about the embodiment of the darker side of today's society.
ISBN9780473254148
Published1 January 2013
Interest AgeAll ages




Cry of Oppressed Women

Cry of Oppressed Women (Trade Paperback/Paperback)

  • RRP: NZ$35.00
Women suffers from oppression. This story traces the life of Nadine who overcomes her own problems of oppression, grows up to be a social worker and helps women who have suffered from physical and mental violence, domestic violence, rape, pornography, swinging, sex slavery, human ...
ISBN9780473287153
Published1 January 2014
Interest AgeAll ages










 http://www.wheelers.co.nz/books/9780473187095-diary-of-a-bereaved-mother/?title=Diary+of+a+Bereaved+Mother

Diary of a Bereaved Mother

This is a real life story of losing one's only son. This experience has made the author strong and caring. This tragedy has been a great help for her to help understand other bereaved people. The author is very brave to write this book. It has not been easy and she aims to touch,... read full description below.

Quick Reference

ISBN9780473187095
Published1 May 2011
FormatPaperback
Author(s)By Chin, Ann Kit Suet
... view full title details below.
  • NZ$35.00 Retail price

Alphabe-Thursday letter Y for yum cha

FSO: Cold days

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I dug up my cold winter photos in the winter of 1975 when I was a student in Windsor, Canada. This school yard was behind the apartment I stayed. During the school break, school children flolick. These photos were taken during the holidays, and we went to try out this fun. A couple of Canadian kids were there to show us play.

That was my first ever winter. They reported it was the coldest ever recorded, a minus 28 degrees. A lot of melted snow had flowed under the bridge. I wonder where all those young men and women have gone. We were from Tropical Borneo and Singapore and were feeling very BRRRR!

http://mytownshootout.blogspot.co.nz/


Alphabe-Thursday: Letter Y for yoga,

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My massage therapist.



I went to the The Bigness Within- Chiropractic & Yoga for a
Ayurvedic detoxifying and rebalancing Massage. I enjoy the relaxing touch of massage and I go to all sorts of styles of massage.

The massage therapist Sushma asked a few questions if I got any injury or surgery. She said she was using the Ayurvedi sesame oil. Then she left me to enjoy my massage while she worked on me.

Soon the hour was finished and I was relaxed. I asked if it was ok to do a blog post on her, and on Trip advisor. She was very happy.

The centre is run by Dr Vanesha Lallu, chiropractor and Yoga Teacher.

This centre is where my daughter goes for her Yoga sessions.


http://jennymatlock.blogspot.co.nz/


search/label/Alphabe-Thursday


Photohunt: Hero Sarah Numan

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Sarah Numan, the 2014 The Warehouse National Community Hero. 

Sarah, recognised for all her amazing and tireless work in our community. Super proud of her. Her commitment to helping families cope with the traumatic death of their baby/babies, create beautiful memories of lil angels and ongoing support

Congrats and so proud of you, Sarah.
BabyLoss New Zealand

https://www.facebook.com/babylossnewzealand



The PhotoHunt for today is Hero .
This is my Hero . . .Sarah Numan, recognised Hero.


http://whistlestopphotohunt.blogspot.co.nz/

A trash free ocean

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http://youtu.be/NkwfuJ_jCPU

You can help - Dive Against Debris today and support the movement for a trash free ocean. Every year tens of thousands of marine animals and seabirds die from eating or getting tangled in marine debris - our waste in the ocean. But your local actions can contribute to a clean, healthy ocean.
Marine Debris
Project AWARE divers are rising to the marine debris challenge by taking local action and supporting the policy change necessary to prevent and reduce rubbish entering our ocean. Dive Against Debris is a global, underwater survey of marine debris and every time you participate, you help drive change. The rubbish you remove makes the ocean safer for marine life and the information you report can help convince individuals, governments and businesses to act against marine debris.
From everyday litter like plastic bags, food wrappers and drink bottles, to car batteries, kitchen appliances, enormous fishing nets and industrial waste - the trash accumulating in the ocean is turning our beautiful reefs, lagoons and seagrass meadows into rubbish dumps.
None of our waste belongs in the ocean. Yet, it continues to make its way to the most remote ocean places and can remain for generations. Much of our waste products do not biodegrade and many plastics, for example, break down into smaller fragments posing danger to marine life and human health.

Together, we can change and work towards a clean, healthy ocean planet. Dive Against Debris today. It’s the perfect place to start.
http://www.projectaware.org/diveagainstdebrismap

Save the whales, Stop seismic testing.

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Been teaching my students about the beaching of the biggest group of pilot whales last Wednesday at Whakatane. My students were curious why it happened. Seimic testing may well be one of the reasons. No body knows.
 

Bunny McDiarmid, GREENPEACE
We still need your help. The whales in New Zealand are in trouble.
Hi Ann,GREENPEACE

Donate now to help stop seismic testing and save the whales!
A couple of weeks ago I wrote to you asking for your help. Because this summer Norwegian oil giant, Statoil, begin their onslaught of seismic mapping – the first step of oil drilling - in the deep seas off the coast of Northland, New Zealand.

This will threaten whales and dolphins in ways that we are only just beginning to understand.

From a ship on the surface, they will blast the ocean with massive sound waves to determine if oil might be under the seabed. The air blasts are so loud they create an equivalent noise impact as blasting dynamite in rock underwater.

And this will happen every minute for months on end.

Because whales and dolphins depend on sounds to navigate and feed they are incredibly vulnerable to these loud noises. It could mean that they can’t hear one another or find food and in extreme cases, it could lead to strandings and death.

There has been no published research on the effects of seismic mapping on marine mammals in New Zealand. But without clear evidence, why is our Government allowing this potential nightmare to happen in our backyard?

So we’re going to work with Otago University to figure out the extent of these dangers. This type of independent research work, as far as my understanding goes, has never been done before.

I’m hoping that you can help fund the crucial research to find out what this could mean for the whales in our waters. Because this research is exactly the sort of thing that could make all the difference in whale protection. And it’s your help that makes this possible. Are you able to chip in?

CLICK HERE TO DONATE NOW

We’ve already been very busy. I wanted to say a huge thank you to all of those who have already donated because it’s thanks to this support that achieved so much! Last month over 1,000 people marched up Queen Street, and in one clear voice, we said “Statoil Go Home, Leave our Seas Alone.”

That same week Greenpeace activists breached security at the ‘Petroleum Summit’ conference to deliver the message again and 26 oil-covered people stood in silent vigil at the oil industry dinner in the Auckland Domain.

Now I’m hoping you can join in too, because only together can we keep the pressure on. Let’s make sure Statoil know that they’re not welcome in our waters and that we’re not going to put our whales at risk. Please donate now.


Thank you.

Bunny McDiarmid
Executive Director
Greenpeace New Zealand

Art in the Dark

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Art in the Dark
Celebrating its fifth year and now widely regarded as an arts-institution within Auckland, Art In the Dark 2014 returns to illuminate every nook and cranny of Ponsonby’s Western Park from the 13th – 16th of November.
This free event has transformed the park into a brightly lit hub of installations and sculptures, both interactive and traditional. The 2014 event boasts a prolific number of works from participants across New Zealand, utilising sustainable materials and energy to bring both their works and their abilities to light.
Art in the Dark 2014 is being supported by Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development (ATEED) on behalf of Auckland Council, as part of its Major Events Portfolio.
Brett O’Riley, ATEED Chief Executive, says: “Art in the Dark is an important cultural event for Auckland. It is a great opportunity for Aucklanders and visitors to our region to engage with art in an environment that is accessible and compelling. We look forward to partnering with this event.”
Registrants for the 2014 event were briefed that their works should adhere to the non-linear theme “Out Of Nothing”, giving them carte blanche to create interesting and out-of-the-box ideas which once again demonstrates the sheer innovation Art in the Dark thrives upon. “We are absolutely thrilled with the artists that are taking over the park in 2014.” says Art in the Dark director Celia Harrison. "’Out of Nothing’ gives artists the opportunity to be truly free with their ideas because from nothing, great things can happen.”
“Something small or insignificant can become monumental - like a tree growing from seed. What we see is not always what we get,” she continues, “and this theme celebrates that. There's a little bit of playfulness in ideas around appearing and disappearing. With ‘Out of Nothing‘, artworks will emerge from the darkness of the trees and reveal themselves to the audience, who will see Western Park, and art, in a new light.”
Craig Neilson and Reza Fuard present Square, a cubic window to a world of seemingly infinite proportions weightless over a tall thing tower where it rotates. Visualising an infinitely recursive void existing inside one cubic meter of artwork suspended in thin air, when Square is viewed from any angle at all, it will display an illusion of immense and impossible scale – the space appears to have been conjured “out of nothing.”
Tane Lives, by artist and designer Johnson Witeria, is steeped in traditional Maori form and pattern, with ideas from graphic design and Western arts practice. With an animation projected onto one of the largest trees in Western Park depicting Tanemahuta, god of forests who pushed his parents apart, the installation flows across the tree and becomes a fountain of light, with pulsating rivers of kowhaiwhai and figurative hei tiki shown through the trunk of the tree.
It’s not just artists that will dazzle audiences this year – the science community are also proud to light up the night sky. Microbiologist and bioluminescence enthusiast Dr Siouxsie Wiles collaborates with Rebecca Klee to create The Living Light – an interactive installation that lets audiences influence when and how intensely bacteria glow, and despite its playful appearance references how these beautiful bugs help scientists battle infectious diseases.
“This delightful event, which came out of nowhere three years ago, turns art viewing into an adventure sport in the otherwise under-used park.” - Janet Mcalister, NZ Herald, 17 Nov 2012
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