Saturday, 10 December 2011

The Black Tie Ensemble, an Unofficial Breakfast and Fair Trade Coffee for a Cause.

Arnold Cloete, Managing Director of The Black Tie Ensemble, was our guest speaker last week.  It was an interesting talk about how the Ensemble started and how it had become a fully fledged Opera Company.  The full history is in our previous post.

President Jankees Sligcher is keen that the Club be involved with the Black Tie Ensemble and no doubt we will hear more about that in the New Year.

There was a great meeting of savants trying to get the computer and the projector to link.  Eventually it happened  but with no sound.  Calvin Meter suddenly leaped into action, moved a cable across and voila!

The intrepid person sticking his finger in where no one has dared venture before is Graham Donet.

The rest of us just carried on as usual:



This is our last official meeting before the long holidays, Christmas & New Year hence the Champagne..well a French sparkling wine...and Angela Neill produced a little red and white twisted sugar walking stick for us all that we duly ate.  She had lost her voice so Amina Frense acted as interpreter and also spoke German.  A hidden talent we had not suspected!

There is an Unofficial Breakfast next Wednesday at Café Sofia in Greenside at 135 Greenway.  7,00am.

First Meeting of 2012 will be on Wednesday 11th January and Sunday 14th will be Champagne on the Stoep at the Sligchers.  This is what President Jankees has to say about it:


Last year Judy and I started this event, having the start of a tradition for Rotary Club Johannesburg New Dawn in mind!
For you who could not make it this year, we are trying to kick start the year with a little bit of Fellow ship and a sip (probably more than one of Champagne)

We will organize a bit of Lunch and I would suggest you bring a bottle of your favorite Champagne.
The bottles we do not drink can either be taken home or kept as a donation to the club, for events where we would need a bit of champagne to celebrate!
(We can discuss who will be the keeper of those bottles) and suggest you exclude me and some other members…

I will remind you all during the regular meeting of the 11th of January 2012 at our normal venue and at this meeting we will probably have a good indication who will take part..

You can of course let Judy and I know by mail before hand, but do not stress, this is a real social event and the 11th of January will do perfectly.

Please feel free to forward this message to some of the new members I missed as I do not have an updated email list yet

We wish you and your families all the very best for this festive season, with loads of Love and Friendship!

See you on the "stoep"

Judy & Jankees Sligcher




Selling coffee for a cause


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A village in Bolivia now has access to clean water as the result of a project supported by The Rotary Foundation’s Clean Water for Coffee Growing Countries Donor Advised Fund. Photo courtesy of Five for Water
By selling fair trade coffee to Rotary clubs throughout the United States, a former Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholar is helping to raise money to fund worldwide clean water initiatives.  

A pump provides water to a village in Tanzania -- part of a project made possible by the Foundation’s donor advised fund. Water and sanitation is one of Rotary’s areas of focus under the Future Vision Plan. Photo courtesy of Five for Water
Five for Water, a project started by Bill Prost, a member of the Rotary Club of Cape Girardeau, Missouri, USA, finances a Rotary Foundation donor advised fund for water projects in coffee-producing countries. After forming a partnership with Green Mountain Coffee, Prost invited clubs to purchase the organic coffee and sell it in their community. Funds generated from the sales would go toward water projects throughout Africa, Central and South America, and Indonesia. 
“I wanted to create a year-round project that’s fit for any size club,” says Prost, who studied in England as a 1979-80 Rotary Scholar. “Any club, no matter how large or small, can help be a part of this. It’s a really simple project.” 

Coffee sales

Even though the project was launched only a year ago, more than 300 clubs in the United States are already selling the coffee. Their efforts have netted nearly $184,000, providing more than 50,000 people in 10 countries with access to clean water. 
An estimated two million people die every year from waterborne diseases, and more than one billion lack access to clean water, according to the World Health Organization. “I told myself that, as a Rotarian, it was my responsibility to do something about [that],” Prost says.  
After the money is raised, clubs seek an international partnership with another club and apply for a Rotary Foundation Matching Grant. A big focus of Five for Water has been funding the installation of wells to serve schools, orphanages, and medical clinics -- but, according to Prost, the project’s scope goes beyond that. 
“We’re not narrow-minded on what we’ll fund,” he says. “It’s always about water and where we can have a good partnership.” 

Wells in Bolivia

Recently, Five for Water installed eight wells in Bolivia and pump stations near a reservoir in Sumatra. Prost has also partnered with a club in Missouri and Engineers Without Borders to create a pipeline in Honduras that supplies water from an existing well and a water tower. The project’s goal is to provide more than 300 families with clean drinking water. 
Because Five for Water only sells coffee in the United States, and several clubs elsewhere have expressed an interest in getting involved, Prost says the next step is to expand the project internationally. 
“This is a simple and fun project designed for any club,” he says. “It works because Rotary has so many international components, and we’re all wanting to work together for a similar cause.”

Sunday, 4 December 2011

Three New Members, Nkhanyezi, The Black Tie Ensemble & a Rotary Partnership..

The highlight of last week's social meeting was the induction of three new members, Katinka Vreugdenhil, Nathi Ndlovu and Augustine Amos bringing our numbers up to 33....three above our target for the end of the Rotary Year in June 2012!  They were inducted by Past President Graham Donet in the absence of President Jankees Sligcher.

Congratulations to our new members and a special thank you for those who introduced them!

We also thought it would be a good idea to have a photograph of all the Club members present:


And one of us took the photograph and isn't in the picture....guess who!

Nkhanyezi Myeni from McAuley House School Interact Club, one of the Interact Clubs we sponsor, spoke to us about her plans for the future and she has been accepted to study law at Wits.  Congratulations.  She has had a very difficult time and Don Lindsay & Arthur Begley have been of great assistance to her, even supplying her with accommodation for half the year!  It was great to see her ...and we have to photograph her with Don & Arthur!


This Week:
We have a visit from The Black Tie Ensemble as we hope to be working with them in the future...here's a little about them:

Determined to preserve the rich tradition of opera, South African diva Mimi Coertse and celebrated opera director and costume designer, Neels Hansen, established The Black Tie Ensemble (BTE) in March 1999. Their visionary spirit of entrepreneurship was underlined following the closure of the State Theatre and its performing entities in June 2000, which plunged the state of the arts in South Africa into a state of uncertainty.
However, the existence of The Black Tie Ensemble has ensured continued live performances of opera and 'serious' music, and has provided employment for many gifted singers who might otherwise have had no outlet for their talents. One of the aims of The BTE was, and still is, to create a conduit for gifted singers to attain their goals, nurturing and developing their talents, as well as to offer able artists with no formal training the opportunity to further their studies and to gain experience through the Incubator Scheme. The BTE has been lauded for its developmental work in the field, receiving numerous awards for their initiative.
The BTE project was established mainly to create opportunities for employment for South Africa's gifted singers of diverse cultural backgrounds, generating income on a continuous basis throughout the year, and is entirely dependent on corporate support for its survival. Largely through the Black Tie Ensemble's efforts, there are more opportunities available to young singers than previously, with many of the graduated singers being invited to perform both nationally and abroad. The Ensemble has developed into a vibrant, multifaceted opera company - one of the most exciting classical music and singing projects in South Africa - and is still growing steadily. In addition to its regular concerts, BTE brings opera and quality singing to a wider audience, regularly being invited to perform at various corporate functions. In addition, the BTE presents Industrial Edutainment Programmes, performing for employees from various industries as well as introducing the art of opera in schools and in outlying areas. The Black Tie Ensemble has become an established presence on the South African music scene, frequently appearing in concerts, arts festivals and corporate functions throughout South Africa (as well as the African continent), while successfully presenting several opera seasons. It has distinguished itself abroad as well, having performed to great acclaim in China and Hong Kong, and Austria. In addition, The Black Tie Ensemble appeared at the AICHI World Expo 2005 in Nagoya, Japan, also presenting a special Freedom Day Soiree at the South African Embassy in Tokyo at the invitation of the Department of Arts and Culture. At the invitation of The South African High Commission, The Black Tie Ensemble toured Nigeria in 2006, performing in Lagos and Abuja under the banner of the Youth Day celebrations.
In 2005, The Black Tie Ensemble established a permanent opera chorus as the next step in the Ensemble's development. This has allowed access to a semi-professional opera chorus which, with training, would meet the unique demands of an opera chorus. The chorus master of The Black Tie Opera Chorus is BTE Senior Repetiteur and Coach, Susan Steenkamp-Swanepoel. Whilst earning income through their chorus activities, the choristers receive ongoing training as well. The collective experience gained since the formation of the company has enabled it to embrace more challenging projects, such as the staging of operas and major concerts as and when funding is available. BTE staged its first opera production, Verdi's Rigoletto, during May 2001 to rave reviews. Its second opera production, Puccini's Madama Butterfly, was staged in the State Theatre, Pretoria. A generous sponsorship by SAPPI made it possible for The Black Tie Ensemble to stage Puccini's La Bohème in June 2004. In 2005 The BTE staged a double-bill of Puccini's Gianni Schicchi together with an abridged version of Rossini's Il Barbiere Di Siviglia. In September 2005, The Black tie Ensemble collaborated once more with SAPPI as sponsor to present the acclaimed production of Donizetti's Lucia Di Lammermoor. In 2006 BTE staged Four Opera Vignettes to expand the repertoire of the young singers, performing excerpts from Puccini's operas Tosca and Madama Butterfly in tandem with Donizetti's Don Pasquale and L'elisir d'amore. This created opportunities for all senior BTE members, as well as members of the BTE Incubator Scheme, to be able to study and perform different roles. Later in 2006, this production was followed by the highly praised double-bill of Leoncavallo's I Pagliacci and Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana, once again generously sponsored by Sappi, which took place at The State Theatre.
Even better, you can hear about them!
Wed 14th December
There is an Informal Breakfast at Cafe Sofia in Greenside.  7,00am onwards...and this is what it is all about!





Rotary partners with world's largest postgraduate water education institution



 


Since 1957 UNESCO-IHE, the world's largest postgraduate water education facility, has provided master of science degrees and promoted PhDs to more than 14,500 water professionals from over 160 countries. Photo courtesy UNESCO-IHE
Rotary clubs will be helping train engineers and scientists to solve problems in water and sanitation, particularly in developing countries, through a new strategic partnership between The Rotary Foundation and UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education.  
Through the partnership, the Foundation will offer packaged grants that Rotary clubs may use to select and sponsor scholarships for professionals in the water sector. Up to eight students a year may be chosen for any of three master of science programs at the institute in Delft, the Netherlands. 
Both the institute and Rotary share a vision of making water and sanitation more accessible and more sustainable for all people, particularly the poor. The partnership directly supports Rotary's water and sanitation area of focus. 
"This strategic partnership with UNESCO-IHE enables Rotary to work with a globally recognized leader in the training of water professionals at a time when such experts are desperately needed in many parts of the world," said Rotary Foundation Trustee Chair William B. Boyd. "By identifying high-quality, high-potential candidates for these scholarships, Rotary clubs will play an important role in addressing a serious global problem.” 
"Eighty percent of diseases in the developing world are caused by the lack of water and appropriate sanitation," said UNESCO-IHE rector András Szöllösi-Nagy. "The cooperation with Rotary is an important milestone in the large-scale, global capacity building required to tackle this crisis.” 
Since 1957 UNESCO-IHE, the world's largest postgraduate water education facility, has provided master of science degrees and promoted PhDs to more than 14,500 water professionals from over 160 countries. The institute also promotes research and capacity building projects, manages a worldwide network of educational institutions and organizations in the water sector, provides professional expertise on water education, and plays a role in setting international standards for postgraduate water education and continuing professional training. 

Sustainability

By focusing on postgraduate degree programs, The Rotary Foundation is making a long-term investment in water and sanitation, helping equip students with the research, managerial, and technical skills they will need to solve domestic problems by thinking globally. Working with the institute is a particularly good investment for the Foundation: most of the institute's students are from developing and emerging countries where the need is the greatest, and 87 percent of the program's graduates are still active in the field a decade later. 
Rotary Foundation packaged global grants support large, international projects with sustainable, high-impact outcomes in Rotary’s areas of focus. Because the initial work of finding a strategic partner and designing the general framework of the project has already been done, Rotarians can focus their talents and energies on the implementation. 
One hundred Rotary districts are participating in the Future Vision pilot, a three-year test of the Foundation's streamlined grant structure, which began 1 July 2010. All districts will begin using the model on 1 July 2013.  
The Foundation has previously approved strategic partnerships with Mercy ShipsAga Khan University, and Oikocredit International.  Pilot clubs and districts interested in packaged global grants with UNESCO-IHE can find more information, which will be posted online soon.

For more information:


4 Comments:
At 2:11PM on 2 December 2011, DRFC D1600 Siebe Stellingwerff Beintema wrote:Very welcome fulfilment of the Area of Focus "Water and Sanitation". As D1600 is home of Unesco-IHE we look forward to help making the partnership a succes!
At 11:18AM on 1 December 2011, MAC PURCELL wrote:This is the way forward, use the strengths of the 2 organisations to MAX the outputs. 1+1 in Rotary "speak" makes 4 every time. Great news
At 11:17AM on 1 December 2011, Jan Stuip wrote:Congratulations! We are looking forward to close cooperation wit Rotary WaterPlatForm (WPF) D1570 and others.
At 3:31PM on 29 November 2011, Henk Jaap Kloosterman wrote:Excellent news, and the start of something beautiful !!

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