Saturday, 28 January 2012

Congratulations, Amina, David Bullard, Welcome Zena, a Business Meeting & the Interact Video Contest Winner.

Hot off the press, our President Elect, Amina Frense married Ronnie Kasrils this weekend.  Congratulations and may you have many happy years together.  This is what the Sunday Times had to say about it under the headline "Red Ronnie to wed again"..

David Bullard entertained everyone last Wednesday and sold a few copies of his book as well.  The main thrust of his talk was Press Freedom and that the biggest threat to press freedom was self-censorship.  I have been much entertained by columnists being fired after their column has appeared when the editor....the assistant editor..etc etc has allowed it to be published.  So much for editorial responsibility!



Welcome 
We welcome Zena Kimaro as a member of our Club.  She has transferred from the Rotary Club of Kilifi and decided to join us.  Here she is being inducted by PP Graham Donet in the absence of President Jankees.

Business Meeting
This week is the first Business Meeting of the year.  It's an important one as we'll be looking at the last 6 months of the Rotary year and looking forward to the next year.


Tennessee club wins Interact video contest grand-prize



The Interact Club of Episcopal School of Knoxville, Tennessee, USA, is the grand-prize winner of the 2011 Interact video contest with its entry, “Change 4 Change.”
The video tells the story of how students at the Episcopal School of Knoxville collaborated to produce an illustrated children’s book about the worldwide effort to eradicate polio. Managed by eighth-grade Interactors and club advisers Laurie Coburn and Susan Lancaster, the book aims to raise funds and build awareness for Rotary’s End Polio Now campaign. 
Kindergarten through fifth-grade students drew pictures for the book, also titled Change 4 Change, after the Interactors gave presentations to the children about  polio and Rotary’s campaign. For the video, club members picked drawings and asked some of the children to read from the book.
Coburn, who authored the book with the Interactors, says it shows how children in their own community can help kids in other parts of the world.
“The book project was a way for younger students to learn about how the disease impacts children their own age,” says Coburn. “The Interactors did an incredible job of bringing students from the entire school together on this project.”
Interactors directed, produced, and created original music for the video.
Club president Rhetta Botts says her fellow members were excited after learning their video had won the contest.
“It took a while for the information to sink in but after a few minutes passed, the feeling of accomplishment set in,” says Botts. “I’m very proud of what we put together and the effort of every member of the club.”
Botts says her favorite part of making the video was interacting with the younger students. “It was fun to see the drawings they made, and hear all the questions and comments about how we are helping other children across the globe,” she says.
The club also organizes “Purple Pinkie Friday” where students who bring in 60 cents, the cost of inoculating one child, get their pinkie fingernail painted purple. This is how volunteers keep track of who’s received a vaccine during a National Immunization Day. In February, Interactors are selling the book as a fundraiser for Rotary’s End Polio Now campaign.
“I hope that the video and book show how close we are to ending polio,” says Botts. “If everyone pitches in, even a little bit, we can eradicate it.”
The third annual Interact video contest received entries from Interact clubs and their sponsor Rotary clubs in 11 countries. Entrants were asked to create a short video (no more than three minutes) about how they demonstrate international action. Entries were judged by a panel that included members of the 2011-12 Rotaract and Interact Committee and RI staff. The winning club will receive an engraved plaque and a signed letter from RI President Kalyan Banerjee.


Sunday, 22 January 2012

Cllr Truluck, David Bullard & a Rotary Peace Fellow

Our speaker last week was Tim Truluck, the City Councillor for Ward 117 that covers Parkhurst, parts of Parktown North and little bits of bordering suburbs.  He was elected, for the first time, in the recent local elections and came to tell us about what it was like functioning as a councillor. Obviously he was questioned about some aspects of his constituency by some of our members whom he represents but much of the discussion was on the nuts and bolts of the job and how a councillor can try and get problems sorted out.  Somebody asked how much he was paid.  As a part-time councillor he is paid R30 000 per month which we thought was an enormous amount of money, roughly twice what some people earn who run NGO's.  Especially when you think that there are councillors who do absolutely nothing for their constituency.  We didn't ask about expenses!

As you can see we had a good time.  Greta Schuler, our latest Ambassadorial Scholar, takes pride of place in the photos.   She will be doing her Masters at the Wits School of Social Sciences in Forced Migration Studies.

Under last week's post there is a comment from Alex Gano, our previous Ambassadorial Scholar.  Just click on the link.

This Week
Our speaker is that well known racist David Bullard.  On the right you can see the handshake that saved a R6 million lawsuit following his apology to the man on the left, or is it the right?  It must be the right because that is where Bullard stands.

He has recently produced a new book and will happily sell it to all right-leaning Rotarians on Wednesday at a discount!

Here's a little more about him:
   
Bullard studied English and Drama at Exeter University, failed as a barrister and became a trader on the London Stock Exchange before emigrating to South Africa in 1981.
In South Africa he continued his career in financial services before starting a column entitled "Out to Lunch" for the Business Times section of The Sunday Times newspaper in 1994. It was thought to be one of the most widely read columns published in the country, at least in part because of Bullard's habit of insulting and infuriating the rich and famous.
On 10 April 2008 Bullard was fired as a Sunday Times columnist after the publication, the previous Sunday, of a column "Uncolonised Africa wouldn’t know what it was missing" the newspaper subsequently described as racist and insulting to black people On 13 April Sunday Times editor Mondli Makhanya apologised for publishing the column, saying that "by publishing him (Bullard) we were complicit in disseminating his Stone Age philosophies"   The same issue of the paper carried an entire page dedicated to letters regarding the column and firing, roughly equally divided between support for the paper and support for Bullard.
Bullard linked his firing with a column (Run out of gas) published in Empire magazine in February 2008, in which he was highly critical about the Sunday Times and its editorial management. Makhanya denied any connection.
After a week of sustained media interest Bullard apologised for the offending column, but said the next day he would sue for unfair dismissal. At least three complaints were laid against him with the South African Human Rights Commission.
Asked about Bullard in a press conference subsequently, arts and culture minister Pallo Jordan said his writing amounted to defecating on Africans and that "Bullard is the sort of person South Africa does not need within its borders."

Folk singer turned peace fellow is changing the world


 


David LaMotte, a 2008-10 Rotary Peace Fellow, thanked Rotarians for supporting the Rotary Peace Centers. Rotary Images/Monika Lozinska
That’s what David LaMotte, a 2008-10 Rotary Peace Fellow, told attendees at the International Assembly, a training session for incoming district governors. He thanked Rotary leaders for giving him the opportunity to broaden his skills and become part of the network of peace fellows. 
Unlike many academic scholarships, LaMotte said, Rotary Peace Fellowships require applicants to be more than promising young leaders. "Rather, it targets people who are midcareer and already have a track record of doing good work." 
He added that Rotarians "are making a big investment, and it is wise of you to make it carefully, in order to maximize the return. Based on the peace fellows I know, you have been choosing very well." 
LaMotte described himself as an unlikely candidate for the program. A folk singer, he has performed 20,000 concerts on four continents and released 10 CDs. But because of his interest in working for peace, he took a break from his singing career to pursue a master's degree at the University of Queensland as a Rotary Peace Fellow.  
"I never let go of my passion for peace," he said. "I continued to look for opportunities to learn and to contribute." 
One opportunity had arisen in Antigua, Guatemala, in 2004, when he and his wife visited a school that served 218 children, with no running water. He was told that the facility did not have the US$125 it needed for the water. Lacking government funding, the school relied on parents to raise money for basic necessities like electricity and plumbing.  
That day, he said, he came up with the idea for PEG Partners. The nonprofit organization, which he directs as a volunteer, collects small donations, mainly at his concerts, to help schools in Guatemala. In the last two years, it has distributed almost $100,000. 
"That’s not a lot of money in the United States, but it is a great deal in Guatemala," he said. "We built a one-room schoolhouse for $2,500." 
LaMotte conceded that when he’d told people he was suspending his musical career to pursue a master's in peacemaking, many scoffed at his desire to change the world. But, he said, "change the world" does not mean "fix the world." 
"The fact is that you can’t be in the world and not change it," he said. "Everything you do changes the world, whether you like it or not, and the small changes often add up to big ones. The question for us, then, is which changes we are going to make. 
"What you’re doing through the Rotary Peace Fellowship is leveraging change," LaMotte added. "This isn’t about changing my life, though it certainly has. It’s about changing the lives of everyone I can reach on your behalf."

Monday, 16 January 2012

First Meeting of the New Year, a New City Councillor & India Polio Free!

 Our first meeting of the year had a rapid change of venue to Linda Vink's Twickenham Guest-house owing to the mayhem of registration at the University of Johannesburg!  It was a cheerful social occasion and it was wonderful to have a simple cold breakfast with croissants etc....if only we could have that every week!

Many thanks, Mike & Linda, for having us.  It was really great.  This week it's back to the School of Tourism & Hospitality.

Champagne on the Stoep
Sunday saw Champagne of the Stoep at President Jankees Sligcher's home.  About 12 of us were there and it was very pleasant.  Many thanks, Jankees & Judy.

Speaker
Our speaker this week is Tim Truluck, the recently elected Councillor for Ward 117.  He's going to talk about what it is like being a City Councillor, whether it is very different to what he expected and whether it is possible to make a difference when you are permanently in opposition.

Cllr Tim, the politician, is a very new animal to me!  We originally met about 35 years ago when we were both members of the SA Speleological Association in Cape Town probably at the Easter Meet in Oudtshoorn.

Enjoy Francoise Hardy in the video bar.....

Rotary celebrates India’s first polio-free year



Watch a video message from RI President Kalyan Banerjee
Rotary club members worldwide are cautiously celebrating a major milestone in the global effort to eradicate polio. India, until recently an epicenter of the wild poliovirus, has gone one year without recording a new case of the crippling, sometimes fatal, disease.

Rotarians and state government leaders in Jaipur, Rajasthan, India, vaccinate children against polio during a National Immunization Day in 2011. Photo courtesy of the India PolioPlus Committee
India’s last reported case was a two-year-old girl in West Bengal State on 13 January 2011. The country recorded 42 cases in 2010, and 741 in 2009.
A chief factor in India’s success has been the widespread use of the bivalent oral polio vaccine, which is effective against both remaining types of the poliovirus. Another has been rigorous monitoring, which has helped reduce the number of children missed by health workers during National Immunization Days to less than 1 percent, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
Rotary has been a spearheading partner in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative since 1988, along with WHO, UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is also a key supporter of the initiative. 
Sporting their signature yellow vests and caps, the nearly 119,000 Rotarians in India have helped administer vaccine to children, organize free health camps and polio awareness rallies, and distribute banners, caps, comic books, and other items.
“With the support of their Rotary brothers and sisters around the world, Indian Rotarians have worked diligently month after month, year after year, to help organize and carry out the National Immunization Days that reach millions of children with the oral polio vaccine,” says RI President Kalyan Banerjee, of the Rotary Club of Vapi, Gujarat.
“The achievement of a polio-free India for a full year is a significant step towards a polio-free world -- an example as to what can be accomplished no matter what problems need to be overcome,” says Robert S. Scott, chair of Rotary’s International PolioPlus Committee. “Rotarians of India are and should be proud of the key efforts they have made at all levels, without which the world would not be marking this milestone.”
Deepak Kapur, chair of the India PolioPlus Committee, also credits the Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare for its commitment to ending polio. To date, the Indian government has spent more than US$1.2 billion on domestic polio eradication activities. “Government support is crucial if we are to defeat polio, and we are fortunate that our government is our biggest advocate in this effort,” Kapur says.
“Marching ahead, the goal is to sustain this momentum,” he adds, describing as potentially “decisive” the upcoming immunization rounds this month and in February and March.
If all ongoing testing for polio cases recorded through 13 January continues to yield negative results, WHO will declare that India has interrupted transmission of indigenous wild poliovirus, laying the groundwork for its removal from the polio-endemic countries list, which also includes Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Nigeria. However, because non-endemic countries remain at risk for cases imported from endemic countries, immunizations in India and other endemic and at-risk countries must continue. Neighboring Pakistan, which has reported 189 cases so far for 2011, is a major threat to India’s continued polio-free status. Last year, an outbreak in China, which had been polio-free for a decade, was traced genetically to Pakistan.
“As an Indian, I am immensely proud of what Rotary has accomplished,” Banerjee says. “However, we know this is not the end of our work. Rotary and our partners must continue to immunize children in India and in other countries until the goal of a polio-free world is finally achieved.”

Sunday, 8 January 2012

Happy New Year!


Welcome back everyone!  At our first meeting of the year we have always asked members who have been somewhere interesting to talk about it.  Always there are some people who have been somewhere different and exotic...so be prepared!

As you can see I have been organising speakers well in advance this year.  Our speaker on the 8th February is Mary Zaunbrecher from the Rotary Club of Crowley LA.  She is visiting South Africa and is particularly interested in our 5 C's Project and will be going there after the meeting.  Her Board has already approved assistance for 5 C's to be channelled through us and the Club wants to maintain ongoing links with us.  A Friendship Exchange immediately comes to mind when we will have the opportunity to host some of them here and then a reverse visit to LA.

Macsteel Cycle Race
Don Lindsay has sent out a circular email asking for the names of those prepared to assist again this year....it proved to be very lucrative for us last year.  Please let him know if you can or cannot assist.










Linda Vink has been so successful at shoe-horning news of our Club into the local rag.....here's an example.

Congratulations, Linda!









 















Champagne on the Stoep
Don't forget President Jankees' function on Sunday....see the sidebar.



Seven ways to get more out of Rotary in 2012



 
 
 

A teacher prepares a lesson for first graders at École Ste.-Famille in Les Cayes, Haiti. The school was rebuilt with support from a Rotary Foundation donor advised fund after the 2010 earthquake. Resolve to support the Foundation's work in the six areas of focus in 2012. Rotary Images/Alyce Henson
Try something different in 2012 to attract new members and keep existing ones. Here are a few ideas to help you do more with Rotary in the new year.
Be part of Rotary's efforts to End Polio Now
Consider planning a fundraiser for polio eradication, or having your club or district light up a landmark as part of Rotary’s anniversary celebration on 23 February. Rotarians have made great progress in the push to end the disease, but the job isn’t finished yet. As little as US$0.60 can help immunize a child against the incurable disease. Contribute to PolioPlus, and learn more about Rotary's eradication efforts.
Think strategically and set club goals
A new online assessment tool will be launched in July to help clubs set goals and track their accomplishments, such as contributions to The Rotary Foundation. Available inMember Access, it will replace paper-based tracking methods and help RI measure Rotary's global impact. Help your club work more efficiently by using the tool to set and measure club goals.
Help the Foundation fulfill its mission
Make a resolution to donate to the Foundation’s Annual Fundin 2012. Skip one latte a week, and you'd have US$100 or more to contribute to your club's Every Rotarian, Every Year effort. You can make a one-time contribution or a recurring gift. Learn how your club or district can make a difference in one of Rotary's six areas of focus with a Foundation grant.
Get inspired at the RI Convention
The 2012 RI Convention in Bangkok, Thailand, 6-9 May, will feature speakers including Nobel Peace Prize recipient Muhammad Yunus and Global Poverty Project CEO Hugh Evans. And, along with thousands of your fellow Rotarians from around the world, you’ll be able to attend workshops on topics such as membership, leadership, and Future VisionRegister today.
Celebrate 50 years of Interact
Interact will celebrate its 50th year in 2012. Since the first club was established in 1962 at a high school in Melbourne, Florida, USA, thousands of communities worldwide have benefited from Interactors putting Service Above Self. The program has helped countless youth develop leadership skills, meet new friends, and become more familiar with Rotary. Rotary clubs that sponsor an Interact club gain fresh insight into service and help develop future Rotarians. If your club isn’t already involved in Interact, consider sponsoring a club.
Publicize your good work
PR grants enable districts to raise Rotary’s profile and promote the global and local work of Rotarians by placing public service announcements on television and radio, in print media and on billboards, and on the Web. Help your district apply for a grant by 4 March. To further promote your club’s signature activities, be sure to update your website with information about your projects and meetings. Also, start a social media page, and follow what Rotary is doing on sites such as Facebook and LinkedIn.
Connect with alumni
Rotary Foundation alumni can be effective speakers at club meetings, and many are potential club members. Reach out to them.

3 Comments:
At 2:24PM on 6 January 2012, Barbara Carter wrote:Thanks for the mid winter "jump start".
At 9:34AM on 6 January 2012, PP Rtn RD Rai PHF wrote:Wonderful Ideas
At 9:34AM on 6 January 2012, Paul WIlson wrote:Our club, the Rotary club of Grantham have used free social media tools to transform our extend our annual swimarathon fundraising event into a global world record swim for End Polio Now on 25th February. With participants signed up in all 6 continents of the world confirmed from over 40 clubs to date, and an additional 60 clubs expected. We have International swimming superstars including a world open water marathon record holder from Australia and 5 time Paralympic world champion, and our event is now being promoted to every club in GB + Ireland by RIBI. We fully intend to establish this as an annual event on the weekend nearest to Rotary anniversary, and we would dearly love to get additional PR support from Rotary International centrally to help us get the world media's attention on the End Polio Now campaign and raise many 100s of $1000s - please contact us either via our facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/rotaryglobalswimarathon or via our website at http://www.rotaryswimarathon.org - Thankyou!!

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