Sunday, 17 April 2011

Our Second Interact Club, Niel Chen and a touch of John Coltrane!


It's been quite a week for us and Macauley House School.  Last week's meeting saw Duduzile Fikene & Ayanda Moorosi give tell us about their experiences at the RYLA Camp.  They were accompanied by our former member Eleanor Hough, the Principle of Macauley House School.  It is always a great pleasure to have speakers from Macauley.

Then on Saturday we formally inducted Duduzile Fikeni as President of the reconstituted Macauley House School Interact Club.  It was a fun occasion with President Graham Donet doing the honours and the Interact Club members entertaining us in song.  As we now sponsor two Interact Clubs it will be great to bring them together from time to time.

For those who like cool jazz the Video Bar is John Coltrane.

This week our speaker will be Rotoractor Niel Chen:


Who am I?
My name’s Niel, but if you’re reading this, chances are you already know that. If you don’t, however:
I graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2010 with a degree in Biomedical Science. I found, however, that I was far more interested in some mix of nutrition, public health, and medicine. On a more interesting note, I am an avid cook, absolutely love baking, and I have a passion for photography. I’m partial to darkrooms, but they’re rare, so digital photography is my medium of choice. I also happen to be volunteering in South Africa for a year starting in January 2011. Hence the name of the blog: Crop, Chop & Change. Three things I can aspire towards.
What am I doing?
I will be working in South Africa in the field of HIV and AIDS outreach. I will not know officially what organization I will be volunteering with and how I’ll be helping until I interview with various prospective non-governmental organizations in South Africa, but I will likely be working with a program called Engender Health.
EngenderHealth has a focus in South Africa on “transforming men’s attitudes and behaviors to reduce gender-based violence and HIV prevalence. [They] also have worked to improve reproductive health services, including screening for and treating sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and HIV.”
I will also be embarking on personal and service projects of my own, working with the Rotoract Club of Philadelphia and others as extensively as possible.
Where will I be?
As far as I know, I will be living in the Melville suburb of Johannesburg. Johannesburg, and South Africa, to a lesser extent, is deceptively different compared to much of the rest of the African continent. Johannesburg is one of the largest cities in both Africa and the world, and is a large, urban, and developed city. With that said, there are still many impoverished suburbs in the city, and like many other similar developing cities, much of the area’s wealth is concentrated in small areas.
Poverty is still a stark reality in Johannesburg, and even worse, health care across South Africa lags significantly behind the standards of similarly sized developed nations. This has exacerbated the AIDS pandemic in the country, and up until the last two years, governmental leaders have taken stances of AIDS denialism and vegetable/herbal based treatments for the disease.

Sunday, 10 April 2011

A Very Little Business Meeting, A Very Special Visitor and our two RYLA students visit us this week.

We had the lowest attendance at breakfast for a very long time with more apologies than attendees.  It did mean that we got through the business meeting very quickly as half the Board were absent.  The real reason for the low attendance was the visit by our ADG for next Rotary Year, Angela Neill.  We had heard that she is the Godzilla of 9400 and many of the apparent absentees were really present but having breakfast in the kitchen.  Angela is sitting next to President Elect Jankees Sligcher who is on his best behaviour because you can just see her electric cattle prod leaning against the wall behind her.

This week Eleanor Hough will be bringing Duduzile Fikeni & Ayanda Moorosi from Macauley House School.  They were sponsored by the Club to attend the last RYLA weekend and it will be interesting to hear their impressions.

 Duduzile will be inducted as President of our second Interact Club at Macauley House on Saturday at 12,30.  There will be a lunch which will cost R60.  Joan Donet will give us more information on Wednesday.


And just to cheer you all up, a photograph of Allan having one of his more spiritual moments, I think.



Rotary Centers for International Studies in peace and conflict resolution



Overview



Rotary Peace Fellows are leaders promoting national and international cooperation, peace, and the successful resolution of conflict throughout their lives, in their careers, and through service activities. Fellows can earn either a master’s degree in international relations, public administration, sustainable development, peace studies, conflict resolution, or a related field, or a professional development certificate in peace and conflict resolution.


Download the
application
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Visit the Rotary Peace Center's Facebook page or contribute on the causes page.

Embed the Building Peace video from RI's YouTube channel.



Learn about the Rotary Peace Centers



The Video Bar this week features Julie Felix, another folk singer from the 60's at who's feet I sat and worshipped in 1964.

Sunday, 3 April 2011

A Great Evening Meeting, the Spinathon Part 2, Interact and Rotary Aid for Japan.

What a great outing it was to District 6.  The food was wonderful and the company even better.  Thanks, Allan Beuthin for organising such a good evening and it was a brilliant idea putting your wedding photos on the wall we really enjoyed looking at them.  Steve Du Plessis (top left) announced the prize winners from the Spinathon which was a great success for number one - here's what he had to say about it:


Our first Indoor Cycling event is done and we did well considering the timeframe we used to get it going. We raised R5, 800.00 in total with the help
of people like Barry Geldenhuis (Owner of the gym, House of Fitness) who graciously offered his gym, equipment and time to us at no cost. Those of
you who were there also got a waterbottel for free, and if you took the time to read the flyer inside, you would have noticed that Barry extended
hisnew year special” (two for the price of one) to all participants of the event.

To all the participants and their friends, a very warm Thank You!!. Your participation does make a difference in someone’s life, and that is what it’s all about,
making a difference and helping people.

Attached is the flyer of our next event,(Beneficiary will be the Five C’s) please circulate this amongst your friends, colleagues and everyone you can think of. The event will be shorter (30 min)
to accommodate the not so fit people, but you can always take 2 seats and keep on going for an hour (or more) . Let us see how creative you can get
as the flyer explain it all.......... hehehehehe...I will see you there and this will be more fun than exercise!!!!!!  POWER TO THE LEGS!!!!!”











Here is the next one so let's hope we can raise even more money as we have plenty of time to recruit cyclists and donors.




















Tuesday sees the Induction of the new Office Bearers for the Dominican Convent School Interact Club.  The details are in the Side Bar in the Interact Section.  If you are able to attend please go along and give them support.  It won't be long before our second Interact Club is up and running.

I'm sure you don't need to be reminded that this week's meeting is a Business Meeting.  

The first video in the Video Bar is a complete performance of Verdi's Requiem for those of you who like to watch these things.


Rotarians respond to Japan earthquake, tsunami






The Rotaract Club of Tokyo is encouraging Rotaractors around the world to post messages of support on Twitter for survivors of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami. Photo courtesy of Rotaract Club of Tokyo
Rotarians have been finding a number of ways to help victims of the devastating earthquake and tsunami in Japan that killed thousands and left hundreds of thousands more homeless.
In response to the disasters, The Rotary Foundation established the Rotary Japan Disaster Recovery Fund , which will support long-term recovery projects in the affected areas. More than US$500,000 has been donated since the fund opened on 11 March.
“It is encouraging to know that our overseas Rotary friends care about us,” says Yuzaburo Mogi, president of the Rotary Club of Tokyo. “I am confident that the people of Japan will overcome this great disaster, and we are hopeful that we can get over the various difficulties soon.”
District governors in Japan are running a fundraising campaign to send money to the governors in affected areas. Mogi says that Rotarians who wish to help Japan should contribute to the Foundation's recovery fund . (Rotarians and non-Rotarians can donate online )
The first Matching Grant project to receive support from the fund was approved a week after the disaster. Clubs in districts 3350 (Cambodia and Thailand) and 2820 (Japan) are using a total of $65,650 to help provide food and drinking water for 15,000 people at an evacuation center in Ibaraki.
Other responses have included:
  • Three Rotary districts in Japan are using district funds to help. District 2610 (Ishikawa and Toyama) has developed an emergency relief project to support people evacuated from the disaster areas. District 2840 (Gunma) shortened its presidents-elect training seminars from two days to half a day and donated the remaining funds earmarked for the seminars to relief efforts. And District 2680 (Hyogo) set up a contribution box during its district conference, raising about $7,500 for recovery efforts. 
  • The Rotaract Club of Tokyo launched the Cheer Tohoku project to rally the support of Rotaractors around the world, asking them to use Twitter to send messages of support to survivors in northeast Japan. The club is also using Twitter to post photos of Rotaractors holding up short messages they’ve written. "We thought we could make use of the worldwide Rotaract network to show people in the stricken area that we care," says club president Ai Takahashi.  
  • The Rotary Club of Akashi, Hyogo, sent a private airplane carrying a load of medical supplies to the Rotary Club of Sukagawa, Fukushima, which delivered them to a hospital near Fukushima Airport. The governor of District 2640 (Wakayama and parts of Osaka) and six Rotarians also brought 1,000 blankets to Rotarians in the Fukushima region.