Sunday, 29 May 2011

Welcome Debbie & Greg! Welcome Joburg North! Welcome Gaynor Ayob! Another Wheel Chair,tThe RI Convention in New Orleans & a Date Boo boo corrected!


Last week our speaker was Gaynor Ayob of Edu-zone Education Centre.  She made a specific appeal for computers and that is an area where we have considerable success in satisfying the needs of organisations similar to hers.  We also had three visitors from Johannesburg North Club.  Thank you for coming.  Their President Elect, Gerhild Angermaier, asked for our help in the future and hoped that we would be able to work together from time to time.  She was warmly applauded, not just out of politeness, but because we have always wanted to to work with other Clubs in our area as achieving things for Rotary and the local community in the best possible way should be our aim.  There is no place for parochialism in Rotary.

A special welcome to Debbie & Greg Smith who were inducted as new members of our Club by President Graham Donet.  Wonderful to have you both as members of the Rotary Club of Johannesburg New Dawn! 

Here is an interesting spin-off from our on-going Wheel Chair Project...let Steve Du Plessis explain:


Requests came thru the D9400 website from Kim Gibhard, looking for a wheelchair for a friend who is 78 years old and has problems with his legs; he is barely able to walk. The gentleman’s name is Gerald Rose and he lives in Primrose.
I contacted Amina last night about the chair she has and we arranged for the drop this morning. 

I called Kim to let her know the good news and she was in tears.....

This morning Jankees, Amina and I went to deliver the chair and Gerald was very happy to be able to ride in the chair and get to places he could not owing to the leg problem.

Jankees took the photo.

This shows just how useful the District Website can be so just make sure that you are registered...and that also goes for non New Dawners who may read this blog.

Somehow we had all out dates mixed up over the AGM and the Induction Breakfast!  The 8th for the AGM and the 15th for the Induction are correct...we've had to change our bookings accordingly!

Don't forget the Spinathon on Saturday...see the column to the left.  I will not be there as I will be manning the  Humanitarian Centre and Jean will be helping me.  I will supply a stuffed creature to represent me.........

Congratulations Allan Beuthin on our Membership Evening last Friday.  We were again 50% members and 50% potential members...I suppose about 24 people in all.  These are such fun social occasions.  Mike Vink produced some wonderful food and thanks to Graham Donet and the Chefs Association, some pleasant wine to go with it.  We have never not acquired a member from these evenings yet.  The late leavers really enjoyed themselves!  I'll put the pictures on the blog later.

As promised here is Alex Gano bungie jumping at Victoria Falls.  At least he says it is!  Notice that the person vanishes into the abyss and is never seen again!



The Annual Rotary Convention has just taken place in New Orleans.  This is what the incoming RI President, Kalyan Banerjee had to say:

Banerjee outlines emphases for the year


 
 

Top: RI President-elect Kalyan Banerjee greets the fourth plenary session before outlining his emphases for the year. Bottom: John Hewko, incoming general secretary, addresses the plenary session. Rotary Images/Alyce Henson
RI President-elect Kalyan Banerjee asked Rotarians at the 2011 RI Convention in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, on 25 May to go back to their communities and think of “new and different ways” to take on the challenges of today.
“We are the doers of our communities, the leaders, the ones who are most involved, who see the problems and have the means to find the solutions,” Banerjee said. “I am asking you to reach within and unleash your inner power and then use it to embrace everything and everyone around you.” 
Banerjee, who will take office 1 July, said Rotarians should be guided by three emphases -- the family, continuity, and change -- as they work to support the 2011-12 RI theme,Reach Within to Embrace Humanity.  
Family is the first emphasis, he said, because the family is the starting point for everything Rotary is trying to accomplish. 
“The family is the building block of the community,” Banerjee said. “If we wish to see a world that is more joyous, we first have to make sure that the families of the world are more joyous, that they have the things they need to be happy, to thrive, and move forward. So we have to look at housing, at clean water and sanitation, at health care, at all the issues affecting mothers and children.” 
Continuity involves continuing and strengthening those things Rotarians do well, said Banerjee.  
“There are so many areas in which we have been successful -- working for clean, safe water; spreading literacy; working in so many ways with Generation Next, our youth. And of course, our greatest project, polio eradication,” he said. “If we want to really achieve the impossible, we have to have not only persistence, but vision -- we have to be looking past what we are doing now, at what we can and should be doing in the days and years to come.” 
Change is the third emphasis, Banerjee said. If Rotarians wish to achieve peace, reduce child mortality, prevent hunger, and stop environmental degradation, they must be the instruments of that change, he explained. 
“We will need to think in new and different ways, explore new ways of seeing,” Banerjee said. “If we do what we have always done, we will get what we have always got -- nothing better, nothing more. This would not satisfy us professionally, and it certainly should not satisfy us in our Rotary service, where the stakes are so much higher.” 

Hewko addresses plenary session

John Hewko, incoming general secretary, said one of his top priorities will be “to better connect Rotarians with the Secretariat, to increase awareness as to what the Secretariat can offer, and to make sure the Secretariat is an effective, efficient, and useful resource for clubs, so that clubs are able to grow and carry out the mission of Rotary.” 
Hewko, who will take office 1 July, said the future of Rotary is bright. 
"We will rid the world of the terrible scourge of polio -- we will rid the world of this terrible disease -- and then we will be bold and aggressive and identify and conquer the next big global challenge," he said. "We will redouble our public relations efforts to enhance our brand and image so that the world better appreciates and understands the great works of Rotary and the value of connecting through fellowship." 
Also during the fourth plenary session, attendees were treated to a preview of the 2012 RI Convention in Bangkok, Thailand. The Host Organization Committee shared a taste of Thai culture, including a performance by dancers representing four regions of the country. Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and Past RI President Bhichai Rattakul, of Thailand, greeted attendees through a prerecorded video. A Bangkok-themed luncheon followed the plenary session. 



Clubs near New Orleans rebuild safety net




In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Rotarians in Slidell, Louisiana, USA, faced a crisis. The city, located about 30 miles across Lake Pontchartrain from New Orleans, had taken a direct hit from the 2005 storm. 
“Katrina literally destroyed more than half of our city,” recalls Mayor Freddy Drennan, a member of the Rotary Club of Slidell North Shore. 
His club and the Rotary Club of Slidell collaborated on a service project to help rebuild and reopen more than a dozen nonprofit agencies that serve low- to middle-income residents.   
Most of the organizations didn’t have insurance, and many would have left town if they managed to survive at all, says Don O’Bryan, a member of the Slidell North Shore club, who headed the effort.
Among the agencies the clubs helped through the three-year project were a local Boys & Girls club, Habitat for Humanity chapter, day care center, food pantry/soup kitchen/mobile meals program, senior center, women’s shelter, and adult day care center for the developmentally challenged. 
For many club members, the project did more than help mend the city’s safety net; it mended their spirits too. 
“The most memorable thing I’ve had in my life was those three years,” recalls Jay Rose, a member of the Slidell club who managed several of the rebuilding initiatives.

Friday, 27 May 2011

News Flash! New Dawn on the Air, Sunday 28th May!

Steve Du Plessis and Linda Vink were interviewed by Jacqui January of Radio Sonder Grense on her programme "Hoe Nou Gemaak".  The interview was pre-recorded and will be broadcast on Sunday between 14,00 & 14,15.  They were talking about Rotary in general, New Dawn in particular and our Spinathon Fundraising...see the ad in the sidebar......for the 5C's.  They also chat about the 5C's and what we are trying to achieve there.

They look incredibly serious as they are probably wondering about how much is going to be edited out!  Listen on Sunday and find out!

Saturday, 21 May 2011

Local Government Election Day, Edu-zone & Oikocredit

Last Wednesday was a Public Holiday because of the Local Government Elections so there was a Bring & Braai at our house for all who could come.  People drifted in when it suited them and the weather, as you can see, smiled upon us.  Our former member Bert Ettekoven joined us and handed over a banner from his new Rotary Club in Delft.  It was a great delight to see him and we all missed his wife Marja.  Thank you everyone who came, it was a very enjoyable day.  We eventually voted at 18,30 and it took 5 minutes!

Our speaker this week is Gaynor Ayob of Edu-zone Education Centre.  The Centre is based in Westbury and is motivated by education as an antidote to crime.

Discon will be upon us next month and already the Joburg East Express is getting behind Past District Governor Shirley Downie who will be making a number of presentations at Discon.


Rotary and Oikocredit launch strategic partnership



 


A dairy cooperative in Githunguri, Kenya. In 2009, clubs in Kenya and the Netherlands received Foundation funding to upgrade dairy farms and provide vocational training for the Oikocredit-supported milk cooperative near Nairobi. Photo courtesy Oikocredit International
The Rotary Foundation Trustees have reached an agreement with Oikocredit International, a Netherlands-based cooperative financial institution that promotes socially responsible investing, to form the first strategic partnership under the Foundation’s Future Vision Plan.
Through the partnership, the Foundation will offer packaged grants for Rotary clubs and districts to work with microfinance institutions within the Oikocredit network. Together, these institutions and Rotarians will identify local needs, develop effective approaches, and structure training programs to improve entrepreneurs’ business skills.
“This strategic partnership with Oikocredit enables Rotary to work with a globally recognized leader in the field of microfinance in order to make a meaningful contribution to poverty reduction,” said Foundation Trustee Chair Carl-Wilhelm Stenhammar. “It allows Rotary club members to directly contribute their valuable expertise and skills without administering the loans directly.”
Individual Rotary clubs have worked successfully with Oikocredit partners in the past. In 2009, clubs in Kenya and the Netherlands received Foundation funding to upgrade dairy farms and establish training farms belonging to an Oikocredit-supported milk cooperative near Nairobi. The result was an increase in the quality and quantity of milk production.

What does Oikocredit offer Rotary?

Oikocredit is a cooperative financial institution that offers loans or investment capital to microfinance institutions, cooperatives, fair trade organizations, and small- to medium-size enterprises in the developing world. Investors earn modest financial returns and the knowledge that their money is being used to fight poverty and promote fair trade in an environmentally responsible manner.
Founded in 1975, Oikocredit has US$684 million (€480 million) invested in over 800 organizations in more than 70 countries, benefiting more than 20 million people through its microfinance partners.
“Knowledge and training are as important as financing,” explained Tor G. Gull, Oikocredit’s managing director. “Oikocredit’s financing relationship with local entrepreneurs and microfinance organizations means we also see the need to help them strengthen their capacity to develop further, both economically and socially. Rotary funding and expertise from volunteers will greatly facilitate this effort.”
Rotary Foundation Global Grants support large, international projects with sustainable, high-impact outcomes in Rotary’s areas of focus. Packaged global grants developed by the Foundation and Oikocredit align with the area of economic and community development. Because the administrative work of designing the project and finding a cooperating organization has already been done, Rotary clubs and districts can focus on identifying beneficiaries, providing technical expertise or direct service, and publicizing the project.
One hundred districts are participating in the Future Vision pilot, a three-year test of the Foundation's streamlined grant structure, which began 1 July. All districts will begin using the model on 1 July 2013.
Information on how pilot clubs and districts can apply for packaged global grants to work with microfinance institutions within the Oikocredit network will be available soon at www.rotary.org

Sunday, 15 May 2011

Business, Membership and Social Networking in Rotary.

It was a Business Meeting and we seemed to have made a few steps forward with projects.  President Elect Jankees Sligcher said that he didn't want an Induction Dinner but would rather have an Induction Breakfast on the 8th June.  This means that our AGM will be on the 1st June.

Jankees is then away for a while so the Club Assembly will take place in mid July.

Don't forget the Membership Evening on the 27th May and let Allan Beuthin know if you are coming and how many prospective members are accompanying you.  These evenings have proved very valuable in the past and they are socially fun as well.

Wednesday 18th May is Local Election Day and a Public Holiday so our "meeting" will take the form of a bring & braai at our home in the wilds of Kensington where some of you have never set foot before.  It will be a true adventure to a land where satnavs never function and our idea of a cellphone is two flags on sticks!

I have included the following article on Social Networking within Rotary as it can provide useful contacts for us.



Social networking


Rotary and social networking

Rotarians help provide service through fellowship, and social networking is one of the many ways Rotarians are connecting online. Visit Rotary International's official social networking pages and join the conversation.
Connect with Rotary on Facebook

Facebook

See who some of the thousands of fans are on RI's official Facebook page. You'll find links to RI news stories and videos as well as comments and discussions.
  • Official Rotary International Facebook page
  • End Polio Now 
    Join The Rotary Foundation of RI's End Polio Now cause page on Facebook. You can make a donation to support polio eradication, invite others to be a part of the cause, and keep track of how many people you've recruited.
  • Rotary Centers 
    Connect with Rotary World Peace Fellows, who promote national and international cooperation, peace, and the successful resolution of conflict throughout their lives, in their careers, and through service activities.
  • Rotary World Peace Fellowships Join this Facebook cause page to help provide educational opportunities for those interested in studying peace building and conflict resolution
  • Rotary Foundation alumniRead about Rotary Foundation alumni on their official Facebook page and connect with alumni from around the world.

Follow Rotary tweets on Twitter

Twitter

Use this microblogging site to keep in touch and up-to-date with other Rotarians and friends of Rotarians.

Join Rotary's Network on LinkedIn

LinkedIn

Network with other Rotarians and friends of Rotary, and see who they're connected to. LinkedIn is a professionally oriented social network that can help you share your knowledge and expertise.
RI LinkedIn groups include the following:

Follow Rotary on Flickr

Flickr

Add your photo of a Rotary event to the RI Flickr group pool, and your photo may be selected for Interactive . Be sure to include your full name, club or other Rotary affiliation, and a brief caption. Note that by adding your photo to the RI Flickr group pool, you consent to its use by RI.

Watch Rotary videos at YouTube

YouTube

Rotary International has its own channel on YouTube that offers video content to those interested in Rotary. The YouTube channel supplements video on Rotary's website by providing Rotarians the means of embedding video onto their own sites. Rotarians, Rotaractors, and Interactors are encouraged to select from a growing collection of pieces from RVM: The Rotarian Video Magazine and from Humanity in Motion public service announcements.
In addition, the YouTube channel allows you to be notified about new videos, and viewers can comment on the videos.
Make your website more dynamic and read " Embedding videos from RI's YouTube channel "

Note: These social networking sites are not owned by Rotary International, and RI is not responsible for the comments of others on these sites. To participate, you must join each of the social networks individually.
On social networking sites, there are several pages titled "Rotary" that are not affiliated with Rotary International or The Rotary Foundation. Only the pages or groups in which RI officially participates are listed here.

Thursday, 5 May 2011

The New District Website, Handbags, Neil Chen and Feeding the Hungry.

Last week Steve Du Plessis demonstrated the power of the new District 9400 website to us.  He also sorted out the problems that some people had with registration.  The website is really going to make a huge difference to Rotary in District 9400 if everyone registers and uses its facilities.  Our ADG, Billy Phillips, attended the meeting and as it is probably the last time we will see him before the end of the Rotary year he said nice things about us.  Thank you, Billy, for all your support over the last Rotary Year.


Sue Beuthin suggested that we get involved in a  handbag project for rape survivors and the Board will be discussing it on Monday.  Everyone was very enthusiastic about it!  

The next meeting is a Business Meeting and then we will have more details.

Back to the 5C's...........

From Deloitte Consulting: Francis Mentoor, Thabo Mokoele  and Casiro Nisebeza
From Christ Church Christian Care Centre: Sarah Sunker (management)’ Margaret Nyarugwe (teacher), Petuho Ndlovu and Ayanda Dlaku – care workers.  Unfortunately I wasn't told the name of the man in the glasses on the right.


And here I'm correcting a mistake!  This is Deloittes handing over Easter Eggs to the 5C's as part of their Social Responsibility Programme.  Hopefully we will be working with them more in the future.

Linda Vink would like us to enter a team for the Discovery Walk the Talk on Sunday 24th July so that we can walk with both Interact Clubs and Ambassadorial Scholars as well.  We have to apply as soon as possible as entries are now open and only the first 50 000 will be accepted.

Don't forget to let me know if you are coming to the Election Day Bring & Braai.

Someone is getting married again so I've put him in the video bar.

Niel Chen spoke to us just before the holidays on HIV/AIDS and his experiences here and in the States with Community Health.



Feeding the hungry



April 2011
Did you know? 
Fast facts about this month's topic.
Did you know? go
Links 
Check out what we are clicking on, including our video pick of the month and blogroll.

Featured photo 
Each month we select a photo you have shared with us on our official RI Flickr group pool.
Links go
Too many Americans don’t have enough to eat. In 2009, the number reached 50 million, 17 million of whom were children. David Bobanick, executive director of Rotary First Harvest, a Program of Rotary District 5030 in Washington State, is committed to shrinking those statistics. He is still haunted by the memory of a woman he helped years ago at a food pantry. She reminded him of his grandmother. “That did it for me,” he says.
Since the program was founded in 1982 by the late Rotarians Norm Hillis and Mike Shanahan, of the Rotary Club of University District of Seattle, it has distributed more than 155 million pounds of surplus produce, donated by farmers, to hunger programs across Washington and throughout the United States. It has tapped into a vast network of food donors, truckers, warehouse workers, local pantries, volunteers, and partner organizations, such as AmeriCorps VISTA. The effort feeds hungry people while saving donors disposal, labor, and storage costs. Shanahan always knew the project worked because “Rotarians use their influence, and people identify with the good that is coming from it.”