Sunday, 29 April 2012

The New Rotary Structure, Blankets, Business & Food

Steve Du Plessis gave us a presentation on the new Rotary Structure and the effect it will have on us at Club and District level.

The response was quite vocal as you can see!  I thought it was a great improvement on the previous structure but in Rotary, as we know, the Club is paramount and everything at District and RI level is only to support the Clubs.

Certainly it is impossible for the District to function properly under the old structure...the District Governor has an impossible task visiting every Club and the ADG system really didn't function properly last year.  It can only be better in the coming year.

But our members did have other things in mind......even if it was only breakfast!

Blankets were something that were much in mind with the Blanket Drive on the 5th & 6th May.
Katinka talked about it and Greta showed us the blankets.  Everyone has really risen to the occasion to man/woman the Bryanston Shopping Centre for the weekend.

Pieter-Dirk Uys
Many thanks Georg for arranging for us to see Pieter-Dirk Uys's Adapt or Fly at the Johannesburg Theatre last Wednesday.  I didn't take any pictures but we all had a great time.  What's next?  I can't wait!

Business Meeting
That's what we have this week and I suppose we are really beginning to get ready for the next Rotary Year and our incoming President Amina Frense......there will only be one more Business Meeting in Jankees's year!  It has gone so quickly.





Alex Gano became a Paul Harris Fellow at the District Conference in Illinois.
Congratulations, Alex.



Clubs reveal secrets to great food fundraisers







 
 

Blue crabs, a point of local gastronomic pride and the state crustacean, highlight the three-hour, all-you-can-eat Annapolis Rotary Crab Feast, where about 3,000 people each consume an average of 13 crabs pulled from the Chesapeake Bay.
In the food-obsessed cultures of today, where scoring reservations to top restaurants has become a cutthroat sport and amateur food bloggers treat eating like a part-time job, your Rotary club’s pancake breakfast faces unprecedented competition. But there’s also no better time to spice up your food fundraiser or launch a new one. Learn how from Rotary club food festival organizers.

Annapolis Rotary Crab Feast

Blue crabs, a point of local gastronomic pride and the state crustacean, highlight this three-hour, all-you-can-eat feast, where about 3,000 people each consume an average of 13 crabs pulled from the Chesapeake Bay. The event, held in early August at the Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, is billed as “the world’s largest crab feast.” Dinner includes steamed blue crabs (whose scientific name translates to “savory beautiful swimmer”), along with crab soup, corn, ribs, and hot dogs. The club boosts profits by selling Crab Feast Mania , a book of recipes contributed by Rotarians and friends. Randy Goff, the event’s 2011 chair, credits its success to a hands-on commitment from every club member and an emotional investment from local residents. “Eating crabs here is ingrained in the culture,” Goff explains. “There’s a sense of ownership in the community about this event.” With crab conservation in mind, the club encourages attendees to “take all you want, but eat all you take.”
Money raised in 2011: US$83,000
Crabs consumed: 40,000
Years running: 67
Charities include: Rebuilding Together, Anne Arundel County CASA Inc.
Sponsor: Rotary Club of Annapolis, Md., USA
Secret ingredient: Strong vendor relationships. Seafood distributors donate raffle prizes, and a local barbecue restaurant provides pulled pork, hamburger, and other meats. Vendors also handle food prep, ensuring that the tens of thousands of crabs are properly steamed.

Steamed spiced crabs 
¼ cup finely chopped ginger
1 small garlic bulb, peeled and finely chopped
¾ tablespoon mustard seeds
¼ teaspoon ground allspice
1½ teaspoons red pepper flakes, crushed
5 bay leaves, crushed
1 tablespoon fennel seeds
2 onions, finely chopped
1 cup cider vinegar
1 cup dry white wine
12 blue crabs, live

Combine ginger, garlic, mustard seeds, allspice, red pepper, bay leaves, fennel seeds, and onions in a bowl. Set a steamer in a tall stock pot and pour in vinegar, wine, and 2 cups water. Bring to a boil and then remove pot from heat. Put 3 crabs in steamer and scatter ¼ of spice mixture over them. Layer remaining crabs on top, using 3 crabs and ¼ of spice mixture for each layer. Cover the steamer tightly and set on high heat. Steam crabs for 20 minutes, starting when steam first escapes the pot. Then turn off the heat and let the pot stand, still covered, while steam subsides (about 3 minutes). Serve crabs hot.
Reprinted from Crab Feast Mania: A Cookbook for Crab Lovers, by the Rotary Club of Annapolis, Md., USA. Recipe donated by Mimi Jones. 



Lincolnshire Sausage Festival

The Lincolnshire sausage, a regional specialty characterized by coarse-ground pork seasoned with sage, salt, and pepper, takes center stage at this festival. In the last decade, the event has grown from a small farmers’ market to a major celebration of local food held inside Lincoln Castle. Produce vendors from the countryside set up alongside butchers hawking secret-recipe sausages. Entertainment includes cooking demos by TV chef Rachel Green, a Lincolnshire native, and performances by a group of roving street musicians called the Cosmic Sausages. “Every year we’ve tried to do something a little bit better than the year before,” says organizer Mark Brewer. “Keep moving forward; don’t just stay with what you’ve got.” A few years ago, the club persuaded the county council to waive the entry fee and moved the event from the castle square to inside the castle walls. Vendors have since tripled, and attendance has soared. More than 10,000 people now attend the festival, slated for 27 October this year.
Money raised in 2011: US$3,100
Sausages consumed: About 6,500
Years running: 10
Charities include: Lincolnshire Air Ambulance, St Andrew’s Children’s Hospice
Sponsor: Rotary Club of Lincoln Colonia, England
Secret ingredient: Experienced partners. Lincoln Colonia club members work closely with food advocacy group Taste of Lincolnshire, the Lincoln Business Improvement Group, and the local government. “Get on board with organizations that know what they’re doing,” Brewer advises. “They have a structure in place and a way to pull on resources within the community.”

Lincolnshire sausage paprika
1 pound Lincolnshire (or similar) sausages
1 tablespoon oil
1 onion, peeled and sliced
1 tablespoon paprika
1 14-ounce can chopped tomatoes
1 tablespoon tomato purée
6 ounces button mushrooms
1 cup stock
Freshly ground pepper

Fry the sausages until browned on all sides. Remove from the pan and set aside. Add the oil and onions to the pan and cook onions until browned. Add the paprika and cook for 1 more minute, then add the chopped tomatoes and tomato purée. Stir well, add the mushrooms and stock, and season with pepper. Bring the mixture to a boil. Reduce the heat and add the sausages to the pan. Cook for 10-15 more minutes.
Courtesy of Tastes of Lincolnshire, U.K.



Toronto Ribfest

This four-day festival, held over Canada Day weekend in Centennial Park, draws pitmasters from across North America, with names like Hawgs Gone Wild BBQ and Bad Wolf BBQ. They compete on “Ribbers Row,” where visitors sample the selections at barbecue booths and vote for their favorites in several categories. Live bands, fireworks, a haunted house, and other family-oriented attractions help draw crowds. “In a city like Toronto, you’re competing with so many events that you have to stand out,” cochair Justin Di Ciano says. This year’s festival will run from 29 June to 2 July.
Money raised in 2011: US$230,000
Plates of barbecue consumed: 210,000
Years running: 12
Charities include: PolioPlus, Water and Sanitation Rotarian Action Group
Sponsor: Rotary Club of Etobicoke, Ont., Canada
Secret ingredient: Consultants. Aiming to reinvent the festival in 2011, the club brought in pros to outline a three-year growth strategy with a $500,000 annual earnings goal. “Rotary is a volunteer organization, so putting on a rib fest of this size is a huge logistical challenge,” Di Ciano says. “As business owners, we know a little, but we didn’t want to learn lessons the hard way.”

Larry Smith’s barbecue rub
1 part brown sugar
1 part garlic powder
1 part kosher salt
1 part paprika
Sprinkling of poultry seasoning
Sprinkling of chili powder (adobo, arbol, or chipotle)

Rub on ribs and grill over a combination of hickory, almond, and maple woods.
Larry Smith, a member of the BBQ Nerds team, helped launch the Best Dam Barbecue Challenge. The competition is sponsored by the Rotary Club of Boulder City, Nev., USA, over Memorial Day weekend and offers a $10,000 prize.



Audacious Beer and Cheese Celebration

“Everybody likes beer. But what’s going to draw people and keep them coming back is the experience,” says Tony Griffin, chair of this weekend festival honoring two of Wisconsin’s most popular exports. The event revolves around more than 100 international craft beers, and selections from a dozen artisan cheese makers. The evening before, intimate tastings pair brewers and cheese makers for guided degustation and discussion. Festival founder Mike Brown, a self-proclaimed craft beer “festvangelist,” uses social media and beer-focused websites to promote the event. But he had little experience before he created its online presence, he says. “Just dive in and go for it. You can teach yourself.”
Money raised in 2011: US$13,000
Beer consumed: 300 gallons
Cheese consumed: 240 pounds
Years running: 6
Charities include: PolioPlus, Lake Country area food pantries
Sponsor: Rotary Club of Lake Country-Hartland, Wis., USA
Secret ingredient: Intense networking. Brown spends months before the festival ingratiating himself with cheese makers and brewers. “I’ve shown up to breweries with cheese in hand, and I’ve shown up to cheese places with beers in hand. You begin to forge relationships before asking if they’ll participate.”



Pancakes on the Plaza

Every Fourth of July, Santa Fe Rotarians team up with the local newspaper to throw an all-day party on the city’s historic square. Five hours of pancake flipping – with the equivalent of 60 8-gallon buckets of batter, cooked over 30 griddles – kicks things off. The rest of the day is packed with music and entertainment, an arts and crafts show, a silent auction, and an antique car show. The event boasts more than 30 sponsors, who are motivated to sign on by the longstanding track record of high attendance, says event cochair Terry Williams-Keffer, known as Queen of the Pancakes.
Money raised in 2011: US$50,000
Pancakes consumed: 20,000
Years running: 37
Charities include: St. Vincent Hospital Foundation, New Mexico Suicide Intervention Project
Sponsor: Rotary Club of Santa Fe, N.M., USA
Secret ingredient: Tradition. Held annually on Independence Day for decades, the event has retained its prominence on Santa Fe’s social calendar, for both volunteers and visitors. But the club works to keep things fresh with menu options such as vegetarian sausage.

Saturday, 21 April 2012

Pieter-Dirk Uys, the New System in Rotary & a Rotary Project in Costa Rica

STOP PRESS

Georg Knoke has arranged 20 tickets for "Adapt or Fly" 8,00pm at the Civic Theatre on Wednesday 25th April.  R110 per head.  email Georg if you wish to go with the number of tickets you require (We have to limit this to members and partners only...we can spread the net a bit if there are some left after that) and bring the money in cash in an envelope to Wednesday's meeting.

He is the son of a Calvinist Afrikaner father and Berlin-born Jewish mother, Helga Bessel Uys. He had an NG Kerk upbringing.[1] He began his dramatic career as a serious playwright, switching to one-man revues at the height of the Apartheid era.
Uys is particularly well known for his character Evita Bezuidenhout (also known as Tannie Evita), a white Afrikaner socialite and self-proclaimed political activist. The character was inspired by Australian comedian Barry Humphries's character Dame Edna Everage. Evita is the former ambassadress of Bapetikosweti - a fictitious Bantustan or black homeland located outside her home in the affluent, formerly whites-only suburbs of Johannesburg. Evita Bezuidenhout is named in honour of Eva Perón.
Under Apartheid, Uys used the medium of humour and stand-up comedy to criticize and expose the absurdity of the South African government's racialpolicies. Much of his work was not censored, indicating a closet approval of his views by many members of the ruling party, who were not so bold as to openly admit mistakes and criticize the policies themselves.[citation needed]
For many years, Uys lampooned the South African regime and its leaders, as well as the sometimes hypocritical attitudes of white liberals. One of his characters, a kugel (social climbing Jewish woman) once said: "There are two things wrong with South Africa: one's apartheid and the other's black people".[2][3] This was later erroneously attributed to Uys himself.
Following South Africa's first non-racial elections in 1994, Uys starred in a TV series, Funigalore, in which Evita interviewed Nelson Mandela and other prominent politicians of the day. In the theater, Uys/Evita's performances include You ANC Nothing Yet. He and his character are known for their tireless work in the frontline of HIV/AIDS activism and education. He is currently involved in teaching AIDS awareness to children and education in the use of condoms, traveling to schools all over South Africa. Uys also serves on the Board of Directors for the Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation, a non-profit organisation founded to provide treatment for and conduct research relating to HIV.
Uys converted the old railway station of Darling, where he lives, into a cabaret venue called Evita se Perron (Perron is Afrikaans for station platform) and performs there regularly.[citation needed]
During 2004, Pieter-Dirk Uys took part in a Carte Blanche story, dealing with genetics and unlocking the mysteries of race and ethnicity, entitled "So, Where Do We Come From?". Uys discovered that he has khoisan heritage from his mother's side.[4][5]
Uys received the Special Teddy Award 2011[6] at the Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale) for his commitment to AIDS education at South African schools and for his on-stage alter ego, Evita Bezuidenhout. An independent jury presents the Teddy Award to individuals for lifetime achievements for films with LGBT (gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender) topics.[7]

“ADAPT OR FLY”

Adapt or Fly! Mrs Evita Bezuidenhout, Kidi Amin, Pik Botha, Nowell Fine, Mrs Petersen, the old Krokodil, Madiba and the dancing DA are coming to the rescue! In a time of depression, recession, fear and anger. What is better and more healing than a good laugh at the expense of those who depress, recess, frighten and annoy us?

Pieter-Dirk Uys celebrates 2012 as a year of radical change in South Africa through political paralysis. From the hundred million rand ANC centenary celebration in January, right up that long winding road to end up again in Mangaung for the ANC December Congress, the ruling party will be too busy fighting each other for personal wealth and political power to bother themselves about running a country up or down.

Thirty years ago Uys started his total onslaught against careless, corrupt and unacceptable politics. Apartheid might officially be dead today, but the careless, corrupt and unacceptable political crooks and clowns are still dancing centre-stage. His new show will be a personal political comedy-trek along a familiar long tiptoe to freedom, through the minefields of racism and sexism that have always made up the tarmac of our political freeway. Laughter at fear has always been Uys’s trademark, from the darkness of his first one-man show in 1982 ‘Adapt or Dye’, to the dazzling kaleidoscope of rainbow colours in his new 2012 show ‘Adapt or Fly’.

Uys is joining his chorus-line of characters that include a motley medley of past National Party leaders (DF Malan, JG Strydom, HF Verwoerd, BJ Vorster, PW Botha and FW de Klerk), balanced with the more familiar quartet of ANC Presidents from Nelson Mandela, via Thabo Mbeki, through Kgalema Motlanthe to Jacob Zuma and beyond. The Malema nickname ‘Kidi Amin’ does come to mind.

Kugel Nowell Fine enjoys her 35 years as the ultimate Jewish African Princess with a look at her now in her seventies, as well as a glance back at the 1985 Nowell, young, blonde and deep in a liberal white struggle with her maid Dora. And then there is, of course, Evita Bezuidenhout waiting to embrace her new job as chairperson of the proposed Media Tribunal.

It is said when history repeats itself, it can take tragedy and turn it into farce. So banish the blues. Come and enjoy the blacks, whites, browns, yellows and ‘others’ that make up this unique country of our dreams. As long as we can laugh at our fear, we are still in charge of our future.

Major Carin Holmes

Carin really gave us a fascinating insight into the working of the Salvation Army last week and especially the vocation of a Salvation Army Officer.  It was something we all knew little about.  Many thanks, Carin.  we are proud to have you as a member of our Club.
Breakfast
I'm sure it was because I hinted at how awful and awfully expensive I thought the breakfast was on last week's blog that I just wasn't served at all on Wednesday! There was some breakfast gremlin keeping an eye on me!

Jenine Coetzer's photo of all the men wearing striped shirts to Rotary last week!




This Week
Our speaker is Steve Du Plessis who will tell us about the changes in structure and systems in Rotary and how they will effect us as a Club.




Culinary kitchen, computer lab give women in Costa Rica a chance at a better life



Women in San José, Costa Rica, learn cooking skills in a kitchen funded by the Rotary clubs of Portland Pearl, Oregon, USA, and Belén, Belén, Costa Rica.
By Donald Q. Smith, a member of the Rotary Club of Portland Pearl, Minnesota, USA.
If teenage girls from a barrio of suburban San José, Costa Rica, earn a high school diploma, their quality of life is likely to improve.
And if their mothers learn cooking skills, their lives, too, will be changed.
Those have been the goals of two successful projects by the Rotary clubs of Portland Pearl, Oregon, USA, and Belén, Belén, Costa Rica, both funded in part by grants from The Rotary Foundation.
The two clubs forged their first links at a project fair hosted by Central America Rotarians. Four years ago, a US$54,000 project equipped a culinary room at the Suri School, just outside Costa Rica’s capital. Through the vocational training they receive, women learn skills that could lead to work in the restaurants or hotels of San José or as paid domestic help.
“The kitchen gives them an opportunity for better jobs,” says María Eugenia Mondragón, past president of the Belén Club.
Her husband, Victor Mata Chacon, president-elect of the club, said the quality of the installation, and the quantity of equipment, bring praise from outside food experts.
“Renowned chefs have come in to teach classes here,” he says. “They say they don’t have anything like this in their kitchens. They should be very proud of it.”
The two clubs collaborated a second time on a computer lab for 130 female students (ages 13-18) with a total Rotary investment of $18,500. Nineteen workstations and two printers will be linked when the room opens this summer.
On a visit to Costa Rica in March, my wife, Nancy, and I toured the school. We were joined by Belén Rotarians for a delicious chicken lasagna lunch prepared by women who study in the kitchen. On the wall near the entrance door is a plaque commemorating the contribution of Rotarians.
I have observed Rotary service projects from Northern Ireland to South Africa in my travels. I have experienced the internationality of Rotary through Rotary Youth Exchange. But this was the first time I have actually witnessed the results of matching grants initiated by my own Rotary Club. 
Because of these grants, mothers will find jobs. Young women will go to university. In a community suffering from high unemployment, poverty, drugs, teen pregnancy, and single-parent homes, women have a new hope.
It all happened because Rotarians “Reach Within to Embrace Humanity.”
Donald Q. Smith is the former editor and publisher of the Monticello, Minnesota, Times; he lives in Portland, Oregon, where he is a freelance journalist and member of the Portland Pearl Rotary Club. He’s a past president of both the Portland Pearl and Monticello Rotary clubs.

Monday, 16 April 2012

Ian Ross, Major Carin Holmes, Blankets, Breakfast & Muhammad Yunus.

Our speaker last week was Ian Ross who was going to talk to us about Nutrition in Africa but was really promoting a nutrition cocktail.  When challenged on some of his comments about HIV/AIDs by one of our medical members he back-tracked quite quickly!

Our attendance over the last couple of weeks has been disappointing.  Especially when you read the article about us in the latest Rotary Africa.  Don't forget that if your membership falls below 40% you are automatically no longer a member.  Please make an effort to support Carin on Wednesday.  There is nothing more depressing for a speaker than to be told about our membership numbers on paper and then to talk to less than 20 people.

This week's speaker is our latest member, Major Carin Holmes of the Salvation Army.


Major Carin Holmes was born and bred in Cape Town and has served as a Salvation Army Officer for 27 years. Major Carin Holmes was ordained as a Salvation Army Officer of the Guardians of the Truth Session in 1984. Her first appointment as an Officer (minister of religion) was to the Worcester and Robertson Corps as Corps Officer. Apart from Corps appointments, Kensington, Krugersdorp and Johannesburg City Corps, the Major served held Divisional appointments included PR and Programme Secretary in Kwazulu Natal and Cape Town. On Territorial Headquarters she held several appointments, Planned Giving Officer, Asst. to the Public Relations Secretary and Assistant Territorial Youth Secretary. At present the Major is the Territorial Public Relations Secretary for The Salvation Army. Major Carin Holmes is married to Captain Keith Holmes.


Blanket Drive
Here's the latest from Katinka Vreugdenhil:



Russ and myself had a good morning at the REEA market on Saturday and managed to "sell" another 20 Blankets, Thank you for the help Russ!

In other great news, I have collected the 200 blankets that Carin arranged for us, Thank you Carin!
A gentle reminder to everyone to send me the Charities you would like to add to the list, I only have the ones below so far :
  • Holy Trinity St Vincent de Paul Society for blankets (The Soup Kitchen).
  • 5C’s
  • Woodside Sanctuary

For the 5th and 6th of May, I have received responses from almost everyone - there are only a few slots left.

Please let me know if anyone else is available to fill those slots. Otherwise I will contact the other clubs joining us for further assistance with volunteers.




Contact Katinka : 0832645315


Well done, Katinka!  We really should be able to staff this ourselves! 


Let's hope the breakfast is better this week.  The more expensive breakfast is getting a bit like the E-Tolling in my mind and probably costs more per week than the E-Tolling will!  We probably average R67 200 per annum on breakfasts....maybe a bit more....it's makes you think!






'The Rotarian' talks with Muhammad Yunus, a speaker at the 2012 RI Convention

 
 
 


Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, known as the “banker for the poor”, began transforming lives while an economics professor at the University of Chittagong in Bangladesh. What began as personal microloans to poor women in nearby villages grew into Grameen Bank, which today has more than 2,500 branches throughout the country. Grameen Bank has helped launch or expand the businesses of more than 8 million borrowers – 97 percent of them women. Yunus, a keynote speaker at the 2012 RI Convention, recently spoke with Warren Kalbacker, a frequent contributor to The Rotarian. Here is an excerpt of the interview.
The Rotarian: In 1976, you introduced the concept of microcredit, which involves providing loans of as little as a few cents to individuals. Many businesspeople might be puzzled as to how lending such small amounts could be effective.
Yunus: Microcredit started in one village in Bangladesh. I was teaching economics, and the country was going through famine. I was frustrated because the economic theories I taught in the classroom didn’t have any meaning in the lives of poor people. I thought I’d try to do something to help individuals in the village next to the university campus. I noticed loan sharking in the village – people lending money to the poor with terrible conditions attached. The sharks took control of peoples’ lives. I thought I could solve this problem by lending money myself. I visited those who were borrowing from the loan sharks, and I made a list of 42 names. The total money they owed was the equivalent of US$27. I put the money in their hands to pay off the loan sharks so they could be free. When I did that, everybody got excited. If such a small amount of money could make so many people so happy, I thought I should do more of it.
TR: Your concept of social business involves raising and investing capital, then managing the enterprise for a return. Yet you specify that there will be no profit-taking. Aren’t you offering something like two cheers for capitalism?
Yunus: People think if you take out the profit incentive, businesses cannot survive. That’s absolutely wrong. There are many other incentives. In a social business, I make other people happy. By making other people happy, I become happy. That incentive is something economists don’t understand. I am introducing that. I’m not walking out on capitalism; I insist that capitalism is misinterpreted. It’s based on a single type of business: profit-making. It’s imbalanced. If you add the social business leg to the capitalist system, then it becomes stable. When a business is run only to maximize profit, people are too busy to examine or solve social problems, so they let governments take care of those problems. But we citizens are capable of solving problems ourselves. That’s what the social business can do.
TR: Grameen has teamed up with France-based food giant Danone to manufacture yogurt in Bangladesh. How does this venture differ from a traditional profit-making enterprise?
Yunus: This social business is a non-loss, non-dividend company designed to solve a social problem. If Grameen Danone Foods makes a profit, the profit stays with the company. Its purpose is to solve the problem of malnutrition among the children of Bangladesh. It makes a special type of yogurt that is inexpensive to produce and affordable to the poorest families. If a child eats it, he or she gradually becomes a healthy child. The company is now in its fourth year, and it’s doing very well. The nutritional impact is clear, and the company is approaching the break-even point.
TR: You’re a tireless advocate for personal initiative across all cultures. What motivates you?
Yunus: Economists assume that entrepreneurs who can take the risks and lead the way are limited in number – that these are the few people in the world with exceptional qualities, who are capable of being entrepreneurs, and the rest of the human beings are supposed to work under them. This is unacceptable. I insist that all human beings are entrepreneurs. No exceptions. No one lacks entrepreneurial capability. But institutions have framed policies that don’t give us the opportunity to discover our entrepreneurial ability. They’re being propagated through our education system, which is built on the premise that you work hard and get well paid, or you go to a good school and get a good job – as if a job is the ultimate goal of a human life. I say that is wrong.
TR: What will you focus on when you address this year’s RI Convention?
Yunus: I’ll be talking about the education system. All young people should be taught that they have choices. They can be a job seeker or a job giver. As they grow up, they can decide which they want to be. Institutions must be built so that whichever path young people take, they will be supported so they can pursue their goal in life. Right now, this choice is missing in the education system.


Tuesday, 10 April 2012

Welcome Carin, Ian Ross and establishing International Partnerships.


We welcomed Major Carin Holmes of the Salvation Army as a member of our Club last week.  Carin was a member of the Rotary Club of Cape Town Waterfront, also a breakfast club.  She is one of the few former Rotarian to have joined us!  Welcome, Carin.

I thought this would give me the opportunity to photograph the Club standing up for a change rather than staring at the speaker or eating breakfast.  What a disaster!  For a start I forgot to photograph all the tables and secondly lots of people were doing rather strange things!

The Business Meeting centred on the Blanket Drive and the Handbag Project as they are both immanent!

Our  speaker this week is Ian Ross, CEO of the African Initiatives Group.  He's going to be talking about Nutrition in Africa.




The Rotary Club of Orange Grove have sent us this invitation:


Dear Rotarians

The President of the Rotary Club of Orange Grove invites Rotarians
and friends to well known Economist Dr Azar Jammine’s visit to our club.

Dr Jammine’s topic will be “Global Economic Crisis and the effects on
     South  Africa’s Economy”
.
Venue  : Old Edwardian Sports Club, 4th Street, off  11th Avenue,
                      Lower Houghton, Johannesburg.
Date    : Thursday 19th April.
Time    : 12h30 for 13h00.
Cost     : R 100.00  including buffet lunch. (Pay at the Door).

Please confirm the number of persons attending from your Club
               before the 12th of April  to the writer.

Yours in Rotary Service

Steven Anastopoulos
Communication Officer
Rotary Club of Orange Grove
T/Fx (011) 485 2512                                  


And Rtn Peter Alexander of the Rotary Club of Johannesburg has sent me an email hoping that we will support the Wine Auction as mentioned in my previous post.

ROTARY CLUB OF JOHANNESBURG 
ANNUAL WINE AUCTION

TUESDAY 24TH APRIL 2012
18.30 FOR 19.00 AT THE COUNTRY CLUB, AUCKLAND PARK


Below is something we are trying to do.  Maybe someone on the Board should comment!

Sister clubs encourage international service connections



 
 

Nancy Wright Beasley accepts a club banner from Arvydas Sabrinskas, past president of the Kaunas Rotary Club during a visit in 2009.Photo courtesy of Nancy Wright Beasley
A sister club partnership between two Rotary clubs in the United States and one in Lithuania is  expanding the international reach and service of Rotarians in both countries.
Author and polio survivor Nancy Wright Beasley joined the Rotary Club of Brandermill (Midlothian), Virginia, USA, shortly after speaking to the club about her book on Lithuanian families during the Holocaust. Following visits to Lithuania in 2009 and 2010, she inspired the Virginia Rotarians to pursue service projects with the Rotary Club of Kaunas, Lithuania, which she had visited.
While in Kaunas, Beasley had also been introduced by telephone to the founding president of the Rotary Club of Chicagoland Lithuanians. The club’s members, all Lithuanians living in the Chicago area, expressed an interest in joining with the Brandermill club to carry out projects in Lithuania. So the clubs turned to Rotary Service Connections to facilitate that partnership.
“Rotary Service Connections helped us with some of the criteria, so we began discussing a feasible project,” says Don Vaught, president of the Brandermill club. “Our two boards approved the idea of the partnership, and the proposal was eventually accepted by the Kaunas club as well.” The arrangement was made official in November.
“The goal of forming a sister club relationship was to establish a long-term relationship with other clubs that would lead to ongoing projects -- both locally and internationally,” Vaught says. “It’s also a way to further international understanding and foster goodwill.”
Vaught says Beasley’s contacts with the Kaunas club were instrumental in getting the idea started, and adds that it seemed only natural to invite the Chicagoland Lithuanians club to participate.
“We see building a relationship through both leisure and business travel visits by members of each club,” Vaught says. “We will be working together on joint projects in Lithuania, but also supporting each other’s projects when possible."
The sister clubs are launching their first project in Lithuania soon, to help obtain medical equipment for an orphanage in Kaunas.
“This sister club relationship is bringing together three clubs that were never aware of each other’s existence,” Vaught says. “This reflects the far-reaching arm of Rotary, and shows how you can expand relationships around the globe. This project is proof positive that Rotary truly is international.”
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4 Comments:
At 11:37AM on 9 April 2012, VICTORIA EWERT wrote:This is really a very good idea. Two or three heads are better than one. Our club have been trying to partner with other clubs outside of Canada so we can have an international project that will have a big impact to the recipient since we are a small, new club. Since our charter, 4 years ago, we have completed 4 International projects by partnering with another club in another country.
At 11:52AM on 31 January 2012, BONIFACE WAMAI KARIUKI wrote:am a teacher with diploma in special needs in education. interested in running a private school to help eradicate poverty in Tanzania. can you support me realize this dream. private schools perform better than government schools. advice what i can do.
At 11:51AM on 31 January 2012, Rtn Thufeall Ahmed wrote:we are looking for sister club.
At 1:10PM on 15 January 2012, Rtn. Anant Barve wrote:Sister clubs is a very good idea to increase understanding and doing projects more effectively.

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