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Filipino News 166

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www.filipinonews.nz, New Zealand's only Filipino Community Newspaper for the last 23 years! filipinonews@xtra.co.nz; mob: 027 495 8477.
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The one and only<br />

<strong>Filipino</strong> Job Board<br />

www.trabaho.nz<br />

Employers - list your jobs here<br />

at very affordable rates!<br />

Job-seekers, check out new job listings.<br />

mob: 027 387 7680<br />

trabaho@xtra.co.nz<br />

migrantnews.nz<br />

32<br />

YEARS<br />

O N L I N E<br />

E D I T I O N .<br />

A n d a s<br />

a p u l l - o u t<br />

i n a l l o u r<br />

F i l i p i n o<br />

n e w s p a p e r s .<br />

F R E E<br />

• NZ’s first Multicultural <strong>News</strong>paper •<br />

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migrantnews@xtra.co.nz | mob: 027 495 8477<br />

SCAN THIS QR CODE<br />

on to your mobile<br />

phone and be up-todate<br />

on Migrant <strong>News</strong><br />

www.migrantnews.nz<br />

JOB<br />

BOARD<br />

www.trabaho.nz<br />

The Auckland Citizens<br />

Advice Bureau could see<br />

its doors close permanently.<br />

Auckland Council will<br />

meet next week to consider<br />

making significant cuts to<br />

spending in the upcoming<br />

budget.<br />

The council wants to<br />

make $20 million of cuts to<br />

regional services, and axeing<br />

Auckland Citizens<br />

Advice Bureau would save<br />

it $2 million.<br />

Auckland Council<br />

Group currently faces a<br />

budget deficit of $295 million<br />

for the 2023-24 financial<br />

year.<br />

The Public Service<br />

Association (PSA) has<br />

urged the council to keep<br />

Citizens Advice Bureau<br />

Auckland Citizens<br />

Advice Bureau on the<br />

council chopping board<br />

open.<br />

PSA national secretary<br />

Kerry Davies said its message<br />

to mayor Wayne<br />

Brown and councillors was<br />

not to cut the services that<br />

help communities the<br />

most.<br />

Citizens Advice Bureaus<br />

provide essential support<br />

for residents, she said.<br />

The President of the<br />

Migrant Workers Association<br />

said closing Citizen's<br />

Advice Bureaus across<br />

Auckland do more harm<br />

than good.<br />

Anu Kaloti said many<br />

migrant workers rely on<br />

the Advice Bureaus to navigate<br />

New Zealand's difficult<br />

immigration laws.<br />

"With our immigration<br />

policies, the way they are<br />

set, people have had to<br />

apply for temporary visa,<br />

another temporary visa,<br />

another temporary and it<br />

takes years and years.<br />

"The immigration law,<br />

like all other laws, is not<br />

easily decipherable for<br />

these people."<br />

Kaloti said Citizen's<br />

Advice Bureaus provide<br />

much needed support for<br />

migrant looking for legal<br />

aid.<br />

Anyone can walk into<br />

the 32 bureaus in Auckland<br />

to get free and confidential<br />

legal advice.<br />

The final budget will be<br />

approved in June. - RNZ<br />

Lunar New Year: Year of the Rabbit<br />

When is Lunar New Year<br />

in 2023?<br />

In 2023, Lunar New Year<br />

begins on Sunday, January<br />

22 and ends on Sunday,<br />

February 5. In China, this is<br />

a 15-day span that lasts from<br />

the new moon to the next<br />

full moon. The first day of<br />

the festival is called Spring<br />

Festival, and the final day is<br />

the Lantern Festival.<br />

Lunar New Year is celebrated<br />

in many Asian cultures,<br />

including Chinese,<br />

South Korean, Vietnamese,<br />

Singaporean, Malaysian,<br />

<strong>Filipino</strong> and Indonesian cultures.<br />

Additionally, each country<br />

has its own name for Lunar<br />

New Year. In South Korea,<br />

for example, it’s Seollal. In<br />

Vietnam it is called Tet,<br />

short for Tet Nguyen Dan.<br />

2023 in the Chinese<br />

Zodiac is Year of the<br />

Rabbit. Other years of the<br />

rabbit include 2011, 1999,<br />

1987, 1975, 1963, 1951, and<br />

1939, so those born in these<br />

years all have something in<br />

common.<br />

According to Chinese<br />

astrology, rabbits – and<br />

therefore humans born in<br />

this year – are predicted to<br />

be gentle, quiet, elegant and<br />

alert. They’re also supposedly<br />

quick, skilful, kind, and<br />

patient.<br />

The mythology of the rabbit<br />

is summarised by<br />

ChineseNewYear.net. “The<br />

Rabbit is the fourth of all<br />

zodiac animals. Legend has<br />

it the Rabbit was proud—<br />

arrogant even—of its speed.<br />

He was neighbours with Ox<br />

and always made fun of how<br />

slow Ox was.<br />

“One day, the Jade<br />

Emperor said the zodiac<br />

order would be decided by<br />

the order in which the animals<br />

arrived at his party.<br />

Rabbit set off at daybreak.<br />

But when he got there, no<br />

other animals were in sight.<br />

Thinking that he would<br />

obviously be first, he went<br />

off to the side and napped.<br />

However, when he woke up,<br />

three other animals had<br />

already arrived. One of them<br />

was the Ox he had always<br />

looked down upon.”<br />

It is thought that men born<br />

in the Year of the Rabbit are<br />

extraordinarily polite and do<br />

whatever they can to avoid<br />

conflicts, while woman born<br />

in this year love being social<br />

and are thoughtful and<br />

extremely polite too. A<br />

desire to avoid confrontation<br />

throughout life is said<br />

to be salient.<br />

When it comes to relationships,<br />

both romantic and<br />

platonic, rabbits are most<br />

compatible with dogs, pigs,<br />

and goats from the Chinese<br />

Zodiac. They’re apparently<br />

least compatible with roosters,<br />

dragons, and rats.<br />

Naturally rooted in superstition,<br />

lucky colours for<br />

rabbits are red, pink, blue,<br />

and purple, while lucky<br />

numbers are 3, 4 and 9.<br />

Unlucky colours are brown,<br />

grey, and white, and the<br />

numbers 5 and 11.<br />

Rabbits are reported<br />

attracted to creative jobs<br />

with wide social networks.<br />

They are good at observation<br />

and tasks that require<br />

fine detail. Industries such<br />

as art, music, architecture,<br />

as well at networking-based<br />

jobs such as in public relations,<br />

may be ideal fields to<br />

work in.<br />

On the downside, rabbits<br />

are said to experience insecurity.<br />

They may suffer from<br />

anxiety and depression.<br />

They may also have a problematic<br />

relationship with<br />

food and struggle to maintain<br />

a balanced diet because<br />

they eat too much or too little.<br />

- Asia Media Centre

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