Author name: HAPI Admin

QC LGBT Runway Show

HAPI joins QC LGBT Pride March

On December 9, 2017 at 3PM, Humanist Alliance Philippines, International (HAPI) through the representation of its Metro Manila Chapter and Secular Humanist Advocacy Development and Education (SHADE) led by Executive Secretary Jamie Del Rosario Martinez, joined the QC LGBT Pride March and other organizations in marching the streets of South Triangle District. It was an […]

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HAPI Juniors 3

HAPI Juniors for Humanism

HAPI Juniors, under the Humanist Alliance Philippines, International, is a wing of HAPI that is intended for youth development. The main goal of this wing is to train future leaders in brainstorming, event-planning, and conducting their own activities for environmental and secular educational activities. It is also a venue for some youth to interact with

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HAPI FOUNDER 2

HAPI Founder Featured

HAPI Founder and Chairwoman Emeritus have been featured in In-Sight Journal, a publication operating independently for public interests. Marissa Torres Langseth, also known to almost everyone as Miss M, discussed effective strategies for advancement on humanism projects, HAPI’s demographics, women’s rights and how religion affects women, and more. HAPI Founder was interviewed by Scott Douglas

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Challenge Accepted

The title may startle you, no, no one’s looking for a fight here. Challenge accepted has been one of the most often used phrases in Facebook, and I deliberately used this as a catchphrase since I know everyone can relate to this. No one’s a non-Facebook user here. “Challenge accepted” is an emphatic statement that whatever challenge this organization is facing will be readily faced with a game face on.

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HAPI Haircut Day

It was a festive and quiet day of November 15, 2017, when the Humanist Alliance Philippines, International initiated a good-grooming-day titled as HAPI Haircut Day for almost a hundred indigent people of Purok 7C, Ilaya Street in Alabang, Muntinlupa City. Some people call this area “home-along-the-riles (home-along-the-rails)” because most homeless people would build their homes

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