Sunday, 27 May 2012

5th Wednesday Evening Social Meeting, Michael van Heerden & a Famous British Photographer.

Wednesday's Meeting is an Evening Meeting, 19,00 at La Restaurante Parreirinha, La Rochelle.  Don't forget to let Mike Vink know as soon as possible that you are coming and how many people you are bringing with you! 


There is no Breakfast Meeting!!!!!!!!

And this is where we are going.  The address details and a map are HERE!

I am going to be late as my son arrives at OR Tambo at 19,00 and he has to pick up a car so we have booked separately and will see you all later!

Last week Michael van Heerden, the President and Vice-chancellor of St Augustine College gave us a talk on the University, how it had developed and his hopes for the future.  He has a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Leuven and so the discussion ended up on matters philosophical which was enjoyed by all.

Harry Benson Photo by Theo Wargo


In the moment with Harry Benson


 
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in a taxi. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg on the subway. David Rockefeller sipping coffee from a paper cup – in Rockefeller Center. Those images and many others appear in Harry Benson’s New York New York, a collection of intimate photos of famous city dwellers published late last year.
“I’ve been here since 1964,” he notes. “I came with the Beatles, and I stayed.”
Benson may have lived in New York City for all these years, but he hasn’t exactly “stayed” there. He’s taken his camera and traveled constantly. He recorded the tumult of the civil rights movement in the United States. He was steps away from Bobby Kennedy when he was assassinated. He captured the fall of the Berlin Wall. (He also photographed it going up.) He was in New Orleans during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Benson’s viewfinder has seen well-known politicians, artists, and socialites, as well as anonymous civil rights marchers and disaster victims.
As a young wedding photographer, the native of Glasgow, Scotland, combined enterprise with technique. To make quick sales, he developed his shots while the bride and groom were still at the reception. He moved on to a Scottish newspaper and, in 1958, headed south to London’s Fleet Street. One early assignment found him photographing a corpse on a golf course.
In 1964, Benson arrived in New York aboard a Pan Am flight. His assignment for London’s Daily Express: Cover the rock group whose song “I Want to Hold Your Hand” had risen to the top of the charts.
Benson’s many books are carefully edited compilations of his photographs, but his Manhattan apartment contains an eclectic assortment of favorites. There are images of Glasgow slums, Muhammad Ali and, of course, the Beatles. There’s James Meredith marching to integrate the University of Mississippi. There’s a photo of Greta Garbo; Benson admits that he “didn’t quite leave her alone.” In 1966, he took his camera to the Plaza Hotel for Truman Capote’s legendary Black and White Ball. Benson shows pictures of Norman Mailer and Mia Farrow, and of mustangs roaming the rugged Nevada landscape. “That was done two weeks ago,” he says.
Benson worked for Life magazine for 30 years, and later for Vanity Fair and People, during an age of outsize personalities, he says. “I was going to Miami with Muhammad Ali, who was Cassius Clay then. De Gaulle was a giant. Nixon also. And Bobby Kennedy.”
He points to a photo of mourners lining railroad tracks.
“This is from the Bobby Kennedy funeral train,” he says. “Passing through Baltimore – I just photographed through the train window.” But he quickly recalls a less somber Kennedy moment: He photographed Caroline Kennedy’s wedding, at the request of her mother.
This year, Benson judged the finalists in The Rotarian’s photography contest and agreed to sit – for a conversation.
THE ROTARIAN: You’ve enjoyed a 60-year career. Are you nostalgic for the darkroom and the Speed Graphic camera, that staple of tabloid photographers?
BENSON: A little bit. I miss the old techniques, like working with chemicals in the darkroom. I miss the camaraderie with colleagues and subjects. And now I’m going to contradict that, because photography is not a team sport – we photographers are spiders; we work alone. A Speed Graphic [one rests on a shelf nearby] is heavy, but it’s not any heavier than the cameras I use now. I never use film anymore. But I’m glad my career was done on film. Today you see a lot of fake photographs. Magazine covers and what’s inside are manipulated.
TR: You’ve photographed politicians, theater and film people, and society figures. You’ve covered poverty and sports and violence. How have you managed to be present for so many iconic images?
BENSON: When I worked for the Daily Express, the reason I did well is that a daily newspaper cares about one thing: “That picture’s fine, Harry. But what are you going to do for us today?” I had to prove myself every day. I didn’t think then of doing books or having gallery shows. I just thought of staying on the payroll at the end of the week. I’ve photographed every American president since Eisenhower. The next day – or even the next hour – I could be down in a police station while they were bringing some lowlife in for questioning. I’ve shot in prisons and hospitals. I’ve never thought anything was below, beyond, or above me.
TR: Do you know right away when you’ve made a memorable photograph?
BENSON: Sometimes a picture takes time. I hate to sound pretentious, but it’s like wine: It’s better to let it mature. Maybe 50 years later I’ll say, “Not bad.” And with film, you were never sure it had come out until it was developed. You’d be bringing it from Africa or Ukraine or someplace, and it could have been damaged. And I used to be a darkroom technician. You had to be a technician in those days. In my hotel rooms, I developed and printed film and transmitted the photos via the telephone line.
TR: What hasn’t changed for Harry Benson?
BENSON: What hasn’t changed is the way I work. I’m an 82-year-old man, and I still go about taking photographs the same way, even though they’re digital. Now I can look and see what I’ve got, and I must like that image. I can and do make corrections. Sometimes I’m amazed by the pictures I get using digital technology. And some of those pictures I know I wouldn’t have got on film. Digital digs in deep.
TR: The contrast between assignments in Hollywood and war zones must be jarring.
BENSON: I’ve always had a weakness for children and animals. I’m not saying this to sound like I’m a wonderful fella, because I’m not. But I have photographer friends who would photograph the children with the big bellies at about 4 in the afternoon, when the light is at its best, so they would get more artistic photographs. I just photographed them the way they were.
TR: Do you have to be a bit cunning to gain the trust of a subject?
BENSON: I become friendly, but I only go so far. If I’m going to photograph somebody and I’m invited for dinner the night before, I don’t go. The subject is going to ask, “Harry, what kind of photograph do you want of me?” And I’ll say, “I’d love to get you into the pool with your six Dalmatians.” “Wonderful idea,” he says. Then his wife reminds him at bedtime about the urban renewal program where he took away a swimming pool for underprivileged children. So guess who’s not going to pose in his pool? I’m not out to hurt. I’m not interested in what they say. That’s not my business. My business is an image. And I never have dinner with a subject afterwards. I don’t want him to say, “Please don’t use that picture of me in the bubble bath.”
TR: Your photos of the Beatles are famous. But you almost didn’t take the assignment in 1964.
BENSON: I was going to Africa because it was the year after the Uhuru – independence for Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania. I was going with two very clever Oxford dons, big-time writers. I’d had all my vaccinations. I didn’t want the Beatles assignment. I’m a serious journalist. Why would I want to photograph a rock ̓n’ roll group that hadn’t yet broken out? But I’m in a business where you do what you’re told. The Daily Expresssent me to Paris. I wasn’t too happy. The Beatles had a gig out in Fontainebleau. I needed another piece of equipment, so I went out to my car. When I went back into the hall, I could hear [sings] “Close your eyes and I’ll kiss you/Tomorrow I’ll miss you.” Then I knew I was on the right story. It was a phenomenon. It was Beatlemania.
TR: Photojournalists work to convey an intimacy with their subjects. Do you feel there are ethical boundaries that you must skirt, or even cross, to photograph someone in an unguarded moment?
BENSON: But what are the boundaries? Ethics could be a road back for people who are not willing to go the step closer. Ethically, I couldn’t photograph Bobby Kennedy dying? I’m a photographer. I’m a journalist. I’m not there to editorialize. I’m not there to say the public can’t see this or that. A lot of photographers would refuse to go into the kitchen [where Bobby Kennedy was shot]. It was awful. It was somebody I liked. I was relieved afterwards that I did it, and I was more relieved that my pictures came out. But that wasn’t pleasant. No one was shouting, “Three cheers for the photographer.”
TR: How did you manage to catch the pillow fight with John, Paul, George, and Ringo?
BENSON: A bunch of us were sitting around in their hotel room in Paris after a show. And one of the Beatles happened to mention, “That was some pillow fight the other night.” So I thought, “Hmm? That’s a good picture.” I was the Daily Express photographer, but there was also a photographer from the London Daily Mail there. I wasn’t about to say anything. And I was watching him to see if he had caught on. He hadn’t shown he’d heard anything. Two nights later, going on midnight, I’m back in the room. I said, “How about a pillow fight?” But John Lennon said no: “It will make us look childish and silly, and we’ve got to get rid of that image.” Now this is the night that Brian Epstein comes into the room and tells them “I Want to Hold Your Hand” is the No. 1 song in America and they’ve been booked on The Ed Sullivan Show. Paul is drinking brandy. And John slips away, comes back, and comes up behind Paul with a pillow. That’s all. The picture wasn’t posed. It wasn’t choreographed. You couldn’t pose that picture.
TR: You will judge the finalists in The Rotarian’s photography contest. What are your criteria for a good picture?
BENSON: A good photograph can never happen again. “Each a glimpse and gone forever” – that’s a line from Robert Louis Stevenson. I always remember that. He’s describing a boy looking out a train window and watching things pass by. That’s what photography is. I don’t like studio pictures, because you can go back a year later and improve them. That’s what we see with photographers now. Judging is a tough job, because you want to be fair and you want to give it to the best. I want to pick the right photo. It means an awful lot to someone.
TR: How has digital photo enhancement changed things?
BENSON: I’m glad I never had the technology to tell lies, because I probably would have been telling lies. [laughs] I could take a picture of you and my dogs, but feel there’s something missing in the photograph. What can I do? Well, digital imaging allows me to put the pope standing in there. That makes a great picture. But it’s a lie. We see a lot of trick photography now. I don’t do it because that would mean that I’ve been tricky all my life. I photographed what I saw. A caption could lie, but the photograph would tell the truth.
TR: You insist that you don’t editorialize. But when you covered the civil rights movement or photographed a starving child, didn’t you raise awareness of social problems?
BENSON: I’m getting in the thick of it and photographing what I see. What I see should inform. That’s the way I’ve always worked. What I photographed on one day during the terrible Watts riots in 1965 was a dead man and the policeman who’d just shot him. There’s something truculent about the policeman, who’s not too sure about himself. The policeman said to me, “There’s a curfew, and that means you.” That’s not trick photography. That happened in Los Angeles. That is what I saw on that day.
TR: What advice can you offer to aspiring photographers?
BENSON: I always tell them to buy a guitar. [laughs] And then I tell them how I started. They should learn the darkroom techniques with the chemicals. Photograph weddings and get a job with a local newspaper, because you need the discipline. Then I would make them repeat all that.
TR: Has Harry Benson ever asked a subject to say cheese?
BENSON: I’ve never asked anyone to say cheese. I just tell the subject to smile. The reason is that people like people who smile. Even if their smile is awful, people are still better smiling. Nixon didn’t have a good smile, but he was better smiling. Bill Clinton looked phony when he smiled, but he was still better smiling. But with the Queen Mother, when she smiled, all you saw was a bunch of terrible teeth. And the photographers would say, “I hope she doesn’t smile.”
TR: Of all the photographs you’ve taken, do you have a favorite?
BENSON: Oh, that one there. [points to a large print of the Beatles’ pillow fight] That is my best photograph. With every photographer, it comes down to one photograph. That doesn’t mean that the photographer didn’t take other good pictures. But it does come down to one. What I’m dealing with there is the Beatles, who are up there with the greatest composers in the history of music. The Beatles’ pillow fight can never happen again. It’s gone. That’s what a good photograph is. And I was coming to America with the Beatles. I never went back.

Sunday, 20 May 2012

Tea, St Augustine College & Two Holes in a Heart.

It was tea time last week with AurĂ©lie Rohmer and Alex Arko-Cobbah.  A most successful meeting with an excellent attendance.  AurĂ©lie gave us a presentation on Fair Trade Tea and Alex produced a Green Tea and a Black Tea with a hint of citrus.  It was interesting tasting both teas because neither had a harsh after taste...just try drinking your normal household tea without milk and you'll see what I mean.

As you can see we all enjoyed it very much!

This Week
Our speaker is Dr Michael van Heerden, the President & Vice Chancellor of St Augustine College of South Africa. It's a college that started as a postgraduate college specialising in Theology & Philosophy...Michael has a doctorate in Philosophy from the University of Leeuwen....but now it accepts undergraduates for B.Com.  Quite a transition that I am sure he will talk about.


Next Week


Don't forget there is no Breakfast Meeting.  Instead we have dinner with all Rabbit's friends & relations at Restaurante Parreirinha, La Rochelle.  Don't forget to let Mike Vink know.


There is a map here!





Receiving a new heart from Gift of Life


Watch a trailer to the documentary
The seven-year-old star of an award-winning Indian film earned his role not because of a screen test, but a medical test.
Rishikanta, who had two holes in his heart, underwent open-heart surgery, sponsored by the Rotary Club of Imphal, in 2009. Last year, his story, titled Heart to Heart, won for Best Science and Technology Film in the National Film Awards, India’s equivalent to the Academy Awards.
“Miracles do happen,” says executive producer Radhesyam Oinam, a member of the Imphal club. At a September ceremony, India’s president, Pratibha Devisingh Patil, presented him with the honor.
The genesis of Heart to Heart was Imphal Rotarians’ decision to document one of their projects: providing treatment to children with congenital heart defects whose families couldn’t afford corrective surgery. More than 180,000 babies are born with such defects annually in India, and one-third require treatment within their first year. Members of the Imphal club, located in the far northeastern state of Manipur, raised funds to send children to New Delhi, 1,500 miles away, for surgery. “Pediatric heart care is costly and rare in Manipur,” Oinam says. Open-heart surgery costs about US$5,000 – an impossible sum for a family like Rishikanta’s, who survive on $25 a month.
In September 2009, the first three children underwent operations through the project, and as of August 2011, the club had sponsored 47 recipients. Last year, Gift of Life in Delhi, part of an international organization founded by Rotarians to provide free medical services to children with heart conditions, began sponsoring youth from Manipur. Participating hospitals provide the surgeries at half the usual cost.
The 37-minute film is helping the club spread the word about congenital heart defects. “We had no intention of winning awards or anything of the sort,” Oinam says. “We wanted people to know what we were doing.”
Vicky Wallace, of the Rotary Club of Lake Elsinore, California, USA, saw a screening in 2009 while she was in Imphal for a district conference. “When the movie was over, several people came forward and committed funds to help with more surgeries,” she recalls. “I was never more proud to be a Rotarian.”
The film, which was released in 2010, also has increased awareness of Rotary in India. “In Manipur, we are known as ‘the heart people,’” says Pramod Kumar Chhabra, president of the Imphal club. “It has improved our image in our state.”
The club’s relationship with Rishikanta did not end with his surgery. Before the procedure, his illness kept him from attending school, but today, the Imphal Rotarians are sponsoring his education. Chhabra reports that the young student is earning good grades.


Sunday, 13 May 2012

A Storm in a Tea Cup, Coffee, Blankets & News from the RI Convention.





Last week's meeting didn't quite work out as our tea people got lost and only turned up about 10 minutes before the end of the meeting.  I stepped in and gave a mangled off the cuff talk on the history of Knives, Forks & Spoons.....here I am waving knives around.....and we quickly reorganised "Tea" for this week!




Here are our Tea People, AurĂ©lie Rohmer and Alex Arko-Cobbah of Mzansi Organic Teas.  We'll see them this week!

Mzanisi are the distributors in South Africa of teas supplied by Les Jardins de Gaia.



And here are some of the rest of the Club...thanks to Jenine Coetzer our itinerant photographer!





Gregor Heidemann sent me a picture of our coffee stall at REEA Rivermarket in April and I forgot to put it in!  maybe there will be more pictures of the May Market.  Here is Arthur Begley, an obvious market stall holder whilst the less practised Don Lindsay looks on.




Talking of practised stall holders, Katinka Vreugtmann and Joan Donet are obviously old hands at the game.  There might not have been many people at Bryanston Shopping Centre for the Blanket Drive but I am sure the percentage of donors was much higher than anywhere else.  The Club really turned out for the weekend and Katinka lived there....I have a feeling she spent the night there.  When we think of how people were syphoned off by the new Nicolway Centre and Pick'n Pay Centre down the road 315 blankets was amazingly good.  Congratulations and thanks to all who helped.



Speakers urge Rotarians to fight global poverty



 
 

Top: Muhammad Yunus commends Rotarians for their work in developing microcredit loans for the poor during the second plenary session 7 May. Bottom: Hugh Evans urges Rotarians to use their influence to help end poverty. Rotary Images/Monika Lozinska 
Poverty and hunger were the targets of the second plenary session of the 2012 RI Convention, as a variety of award-winning speakers encouraged Rotarians to use their ingenuity to solve these global challenges.
Microcredit pioneer Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, commended Rotarians for their work in developing microcredit loans for the poor. The founder of Grameen Bank also encouraged Rotarians to pursue social business enterprises that would work with microcredit-funded businesses not just to produce revenue but also to return profits to the communities where they operate.
As an example, Yunus highlighted a joint venture between Grameen Bank and Danone, a European food company, to produce high-nutrition yogurt for children in Bangladesh. The goal is to reduce malnutrition while creating manufacturing and distribution jobs.
“In today’s world, we use money to make money, not solve problems,” said Yunus. “If we use money creatively in a business framework, we can solve any problem.”
Recently, Grameen Bank also joined forces with Adidas to produce shoes that cost less than US$1 per pair. The affordable shoes help prevent infection by foot parasites in poor communities.
“My dream is to one day take poverty out of our society and put it in a museum that our grandchildren can visit to see what it was like,” Yunus said.
Antipoverty crusader Hugh Evans, cofounder and CEO of theGlobal Poverty Project, said Rotary can use its considerable influence to fight poverty.
“Like Rotary, we believe that mass mobilization of individuals can effect real change in the world,” Evans said. “When we focus on the needs of others, our own burdens become lighter. Our perspective sharpens.”
“This idea, the same one that drives you as Rotarians, guides our work at the Global Poverty Project,” he said.

UN connection

Gillian Sorensen, senior adviser and national advocate at the United Nations Foundation, encouraged Rotarians to work with governments to solve global problems including poverty, hunger, illiteracy, and lack of access to clean drinking water and sanitation.
“What is clear is that problems like this are too great for governments alone to resolve,” said Sorensen, who has served in many positions at the UN including assistant secretary-general for external relations. “They need partners of every kind, from private sector to civil organizations like yours, who have the means to contribute and lead.”
Sorensen said Rotary, which has a 66-year relationship with the UN, continues to be an active and influential presence at the organization’s headquarters in New York. “You play a similar role with UNICEF, UNESCO, and WHO,” she adds.
Angelique Kidjo, Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter and activist , said the world has many health issues for which there are no solutions, but added that “the most frustrating are the ones for which we have a solution and not enough is being done.”
Kidjo, who was named a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador in 2002, said Rotary’s “This Close” campaign is the right message to help eradicate polio for good.
“What I love about [the campaign] is that a simple goal is set,” she said. “We know eradication is possible. With your goodwill and energy, this goal is achievable.”


Sunday, 6 May 2012

Business, Blankets, Tea & the RI Convention Opening




















Last week's meeting was a Business Meeting which was poorly attended.  Many of our members are overseas at the moment or were unable to attend.

Blanket Drive
This weekend we manned and womanned tables at the Bryanston Shopping Centre.  It's not the busiest place as there is the huge Pick 'n Pay Centre down the road and the brand new Nicolway Centre in the opposite direction.  The Club really turned out to make it a success and we didn't do too badly considering the lack of traffic through the Centre.  What is more to the point, we enjoyed ourselves.  Photographs have been taken and will appear in due course.  I just took one photo!  I think it says a lot about Bryanston Shopping Centre.  The customers must tread very carefully there!




Katinka Vreugdenhil organised everything including us and spent most of her weekend there.  We all applaud you and thank you for doing such a good job.









This Week's Meeting
It's a Tea Tasting and talk by Aurelie Rohmer of Mzansi Organic Teas.  The teas are all fair-trade teas as Mzansi are the distributors for Les Jardins de Gaia in South Africa.  It promises to be a fascinating meeting and one worth inviting a guest/potential member to.

The Gaia website is in French but I'm sure most of you won't need to press the "translate" button!  That reminds me, I've put one in the sidebar.

Donations to Our Projects
We discovered, almost by chance, that someone had recently made a substantial donation to our projects via Back-a-Buddy and the Big Walk a couple of years ago!  I have put a link to that donation portal in our side bar.  Thank you very much to the donor!  We don't know who you are!

I'll sort out updating the Back-a Buddy information and add a link to this blog via Allan Beuthin.

5th Wednesday (29th May)

The 5th Wednesday is always an evening meeting plus who ever you want to bring along with you.  This month we are going to Restaurante Parreirinha in La Rochelle.  We went their a couple of years ago and had a great evening.  It's a Portuguese Pub and the food and prices are fantastic.  Put it in your diary and remember, there is no Breakfast Meeting on that day.



Thai royalty opens 2012 RI Convention in Bangkok



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Aroyal appearance, and entertainment fit for a king, kicked off the 2012 RI Convention in Bangkok, Thailand, 6 May, where Rotarians gathered to celebrate past accomplishments and future friendships.
Her Royal Highness Princess Chulabhorn represented His Majesty the King at the opening ceremony,  thanking Rotarians for their good work around the world.
“I’m truly impressed by the unity of all Rotarians in devoting themselves to charity work in a spirit of selfless benevolence and dedication as befits Rotary’s own motto, Service Above Self,” said Princess Chulabhorn. “I am confident that your unwavering commitment and good intentions will reap due reward for our common cause.”
RI President Kalyan Banerjee presented the princess with a gift of appreciation. Flags of the 200 countries and regions where Rotary clubs serve their communities were presented on stage, followed by a performance of the national anthem of Thailand by Thai pop music star Tata Young.
In his opening remarks, Banerjee said Rotary is stronger today than it was at the beginning of his presidential term.
“I came into this year determined to make a difference, to leave Rotary stronger at the end of my year. And those goals were met,” said Banerjee. “But if there is one thing I have learned in this incredible year, it is that the changes that I have seen, the lives that have been touched haven’t been because of me. They have been because of you.”
Banerjee praised the Rotary projects that he and his wife, Binota, saw during their travels throughout the year, sharing how overwhelmed with pride and joy he was for their great work.
This year, Banerjee visited projects from New York to the newest Rotary country, South Sudan, where Rotarians from several countries are working with the government to build a multimillion dollar hospital.
He also highlighted the recent project partnership agreement between RI and ShelterBox, a grassroots Rotary club-sponsored disaster relief organization.
“We Rotarians pride ourselves on being the first to arrive when help is needed – and the last to leave. By partnering with ShelterBox, we’ll be able to do even more,” said Banerjee. “I hope this will be only the first of many project partners, as we look to expand our reach with more volunteers, in more places than ever before.”

Youth, social media vital to Rotary’s future

Banerjee said the best way to raise Rotary’s public profile and ensure its future is to bring in more young people.
“You only have to look around yourselves to realize that this is a problem we have to face,” said Banerjee. “Young people have to know what Rotary is, and why they should want to be a part of it.”
RI is already using social media like Facebook and Twitter to help spread the word. “More and more clubs of our clubs are using these tools that excite and inspire and that are drawing in new members – especially younger members, who are so key to Rotary’s future,” Banerjee said.
The opening plenary session also featured a Thai cultural dance performance by Creative Destination Management, and the Bangkok Symphony Orchestra.

In other convention news:

  • Bangkok Governor Sukhumbhan Boribhat took part in a dedication ceremony of a new playground at the Queen’s 60th Birthday Park. Rotary volunteers and more than 200 children participated in the event. Rotarians from Bangkok and the U.S. contributed $60,000 and volunteered to build the playground.
  • More than 150 Rotaract club members from 23 countries painted, refurbished, and installed water purifiers at a middle school damaged by this year’s floods. Volunteers also planted trees in the playground area and organized the school library with 200 books donated by the Rotary Club of Patumwan.
Get the latest news, photos, and videos from Bangkok and read more about the convention in the Rotary Voices blog.