Tom Wheeler in many different guises and wearing many different hats! The photo in the middle is him in his traditional Uzbek attire the others are his various work clothes. They are made of silk and as industrial clothing are tax deductible. It was a very interesting talk on the former Soviet Republics of Central Asia. The natural mineral wealth and their sheer size was quite amazing. Many thanks, Tom. Perhaps we can welcome you back at some stage to talk about other aspects of foreign policy relating to the region?
Presidents in our Club are a bit like monarchs, in profile they face to the left and then to the right from reign to reign. After the left-facing President Graham Donet comes the right-facing Jankees Sligcher. Congratulations, Jankees, on being our President-elect for 2011 -12! The moustache is an addition. His idea is that to counteract the female habit of wearing tiaras to formal Club events all men should wear moustaches. They don't have to be grown, just stuck on. One of our members will bare an uncanny resemblance to a well-known historical moustacheur if he combs his hair slightly differently!
It's our member talk this week and Steve du Plessis is going to talk on Hawaii where he was based for a while. I thought about a hula girl picture and then realised that it would probably be wasted on 51% of the Club.
As we are a democracy, I opted for a landscape that could be Mozambique. In order to liven things up here's another landscape!
Rather sadly John Paisley is returning to Cape Town so we have effectively lost him already. Here he is announcing his impending departure. He will remain a member of our Club until he finds one that he will enjoy in the Fairest Cape. We are sorry to see him go but he was introduced to Rotary by our Club and is not lost to the organisation and that is the most important thing of all.
I rather like the concept of Rotary Peace Fellows. Here's what one of them, Kelly Nichols, has to say:
I was in a taxi on the way to testify before Congress on the situation facing Colombia’s human rights defenders, the first time I was to appear before a congressional hearing, and I had the jitters.
I turned to my Colombian colleague – a human rights lawyer with two decades of experience backing the victims of Colombia's 40-year war – and asked if he felt anxious too.
“What makes me nervous is the thought of returning to Colombia after these hearings and what could follow,” he responded.
I’d just returned from working with indigenous communities in the Ecuadorian Amazon and Chiapas, Mexico, and wanted to promote peace and conflict resolution, but had no idea how to move forward without a master’s degree. Then a person I met while volunteering for Oxfam told me about the Rotary Peace Centers program. Being Australian, I contacted the Rotary Club of Roseville Chase, in a suburb of Sydney, and a few months later, I was selected as one of 50 fellowship recipients.
The program brought me to the University of Bradford in the United Kingdom to study international conflict resolution where I focused on mediation and politics. I developed friendships with other fellows – two of them came to Australia for my wedding. I was able to research human rights, regional politics in Latin America and Africa, internal displacement, religion, and conflict resolution.
I was fortunate to do my applied field experience – a requirement of the Rotary Peace Fellowship – with the United Nations independent expert on minority issues. I examined human rights abuses against Afro-Colombians, who have been disproportionally affected by conflict, especially by forced displacement.
Now, three years after graduating, I’ve met with young women who have shown me their wedding photos, much like my own. The difference is that their husbands are dead, murdered by the armed forces and later dressed up to look like enemy guerrillas killed in combat. Between January 2007 and July 2008, nearly one person a day was murdered by the armed forces.
Efforts to bring international attention to this have forced the government to purge some officers and officials. In my position at the U.S. Office on Colombia, I have met with senior Obama administration officials and members of Congress to urge them to pressure Colombian leaders to end the lethal abuse of power. We’ve been able to reduce the number of “extrajudicial executions.” We’ve also helped persuade the country’s government to rid the armed forces of over 50 rogue officers and senior officials, and to establish an armywide human rights curriculum.
Doing what I do takes commitment, but it also requires training. That’s where my Rotary Peace Fellowship kicked in. I learned so much from my two years at Bradford that I’ve been able to put to use. Without that preparation, I’m not sure I would have been able to make any headway at all in a country with such complex and entrenched conflict.
After the congressional hearing, my Colombian colleague said to me, “Do you have any idea how important the work is that your organization is doing to allow us to continue to help Colombian victims?” In this line of work, it’s hard to measure success, and calculating numbers doesn’t seem all that relevant. Saving one person makes it worthwhile.
Don't forget the Rotary Spring Charity Walk this coming Sunday at Modderfontein. Just to show that even I can do it, here's a happy finisher last year!
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