Simpol Beyond The Spotlight: Chef Tatung’s Long Game

Chef Tatung steps back from the spotlight, allowing Simpol to evolve into a collaborative ecosystem built on shared voices, deeper trust, and long-term sustainability beyond a single personality.

Unilever Philippines And General Trias City Government Sign Partnership To Strengthen Community Livelihoods

Unilever Philippines partners with City Government of General Trias to launch GentriAsenso, creating new livelihood opportunities for local communities.

When Algorithms Became Gatekeepers Of Reputation

Algorithmic systems reward consistency and credibility, reinforcing organizations that maintain clear, stable, and trustworthy digital footprints.

How Simpol Became Part Of The Filipino Table

Simpol evolves from simple recipes into shared family traditions, showing how food becomes part of everyday Filipino life and memory through meaningful, accessible cooking guidance.

Antiqueña Writes Children’s Book To Promote Local Language

The launch marks another milestone in promoting local language through storytelling.

Antiqueña Writes Children’s Book To Promote Local Language

3090
3090

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

An Antiqueña writer launched her 8th children’s book, “Si Lemon kag si Alibangbang” (Lemon and Alibangbang), written in Kinaray-a to encourage the love for reading and promote the local dialect of Antique.

Linda Arnaez Lee, who hails from Barangay Pantao, Sibalom, but is now residing in Busan, South Korea, together with her family, came home to launch her new children’s book on Jan. 7.

“I had been writing children’s books in Kinaray-a to promote our local dialect and encourage the habit of reading,” she said in an interview on Thursday.

Lee said the Lemon and Alibangbang taught children a moral lesson about sacrificing oneself for the good of the whole.

“The story on how the leaves sacrifice themselves or serve as food for the caterpillars of the butterfly so it could pollinate teaches children a lesson that they, too, could sacrifice or do something for their family and community,” she said.

Lee further said that children, by contributing something, could achieve good results, such as the lemon tree bearing many fruits.

“The book has been written in a simple but entertaining way so that the children could easily understand the lifecycle of the butterfly,” she added.

The book has been translated into English by Jose Edison Tondares of St. Anthony’s College and Danielle Krist “DK” Terbio as illustrator. (PNA)