Sunday, 27 February 2011

A Business Meeting, Turquoise Harmony and the Christchurch Earthquake.

 Last week Aydin Inal, Director of the Turquoise Harmony Institute, spoke to us on the work of the Institute in promoting good Interfaith relations and the promotion of the understanding of Turkish culture.  We really appreciated his talk as he had to rush off for an on-air discussion at the SABC when it would have been very easy to cancel his talk at the last minute.  Thank you Aydin.
As you can see we were visited by our AG, Billy Philips and our Ambassadorial Scholar, Alex Gano brought another Scholar with him, Lina Saintus, who will be our guest speaker on the 15th March.

This week's meeting is a Business Meeting......and we will hear about our latest Cycle Race Marshalling! The Photos will appear on the blog in due course.  It's all happening as I write this.


New Zealand Rotarians responding to Christchurch Earthquake


 



The March issue of Rotary Down Under, the regional magazine in New Zealand, Australia, and neighboring countries, will include coverage of the Christchurch earthquake.
Rotarians in New Zealand are doing what they can to assist victims of the devastating earthquake 22 February in Christchurch, where more than 100 people have been killed and at least 200 are still missing.
As efforts move from search-and-rescue to recovery, responses from Rotarians offering assistance have been pouring in. Authorities are requesting that donations in kind or noncash items not be sent to Christchurch, as the government, local agencies, and NGOs have sufficient emergency and second phase supplies for the ongoing needs of the community.
Rotary New Zealand World Community Service, a group of Rotarians dedicated to international service projects in New Zealand and the South Pacific, has set up an earthquake appeal fund. Learn more.
“New Zealand is a small country and everyone knows someone in Christchurch, so this is truly a national disaster," said Past RI President William B. Boyd, a native of New Zealand. “I know that the six districts [there] will work together to rebuild the spirit of the city. Best wishes from Rotarians from around the world have reminded us once again that we are a family and that in difficult times, families come together."
The incoming Rotary Foundation trustee-chair added: "The Rotary Foundation has an important place in the family of Rotary, and our Foundation will play its part as Christchurch rebuilds.”
According to a press release on the Rotary Zone 7B (New Zealand and Pacific Islands) website, Rotarians are offering to host traumatized residents so that they can get away to rest before trying to rebuild their lives. The effort is being coordinated within Rotary and through welfare agencies.
"We are OK but very stirred and shaken. Aftershocks are still continuing," assistant Rotary coordinator Ross Skinner wrote in a post on the site. "We have power and water (it seems) but no waste water or flushing of toilets."
Leanne Jaggs, past governor for District 9920 who lives in Auckland, posted on Tuesday that she was in Christchurch on business when the earthquake hit. "I was just about to jump out of my rental car for a meeting, when it felt like the car was moving," she wrote. "Our hope is that everyone we know is safe."
Find more news updates on the Rotary Zone 7B website.

Tuesday, 22 February 2011

Linda Vink hits the Melville & Northcliffe Times again!


New Dawn Rotary Club gives wheels to the needy

During the past year the Rotary Club of Johannesburg New Dawn has donated 18 wheelchairs to disabled patients in clinics, hospitals and communities across the city.
22 February 2011
    
The project is coordinated by Professor Lucille Blumberg, member of New Dawn and also deputy director of the National Institute for Communicable Diseases.
Many of the wheelchair donations have been made to patients in Daveyton, in partnership with Luschka Dearle from Rita Henn Pysiotherapy Practitioners. Through their volunteer outreach programme the organisation provides a service to people in need in the community.
"This project has made a significant difference to the lives of so many individuals." said Dearle.

Sunday, 20 February 2011

Amina Frense talks to us, the Blue Brigade and the Turquoise Harmony Institute.

Amina Frense spoke to us last week on her work at the Southern African Broadcasting Association.  It sounded a difficult job under uncertain circumstances.  Nici Hammerschmidt ran the brag in singular sandals, as you can see!

Most of the men, by some weird fluke, were wearing blue shirts...so here is the Blue Shirt Brigade!  Maybe it was just a blue rinse!  I am certainly going to make sure that I don't wear one next week!

Our speaker this week is Aydin Inal, the Director of The Turquoise Harmony Institute which also houses the Turkish Cultural Centre.


Turquoise Harmony Institute

Turquoise Harmony Institute (IT 11269/06) was originally established in 2006 as Interfaith Foundation of South Africa (IFSA) in order to foster relations among different faith and cultural traditions to contribute to the well being of humanity. We encourage and facilitate exchange of views and experiences between different parts of the society and engage in activities that are aimed at stimulating critical thinking and analysis of affairs affecting the lives all people.
We engaged in many activities in our short history such as conferences, seminars, iftaar dinners, intercultural trips, dialogue awards, etc. The aim of these activities is to promote dialogue, tolerance and understanding among peoples of South Africa and the world by contributing to the universal values such as love, tolerance, democracy, human rights and justice.
In the past, these activities mainly focused on interfaith dialogue and with the new structure (THI) we hope to engage in activities of wider spectra so that greater contribution may be made to spread dialogue and understanding in all communities.
Every new day is proving even more strongly that one of the most needed qualities in today’s world is tolerance and understanding of the other as despite the developments in technology and social life the distance between people seems to be growing. With growing distance among people understanding among people is slipping away and labelling is becoming a norm. There is a great tendency in superficial appearances and shallow understanding that comes with lack of knowledge of the ‘other’. It is of great importance that everybody should be allowed to exist as themselves and be accepted as he/she is. It must be noted that our diversity and differences are God-given and our richness and strength. The unity in diversity will give us the power to overcome the challenges of our time.
THI operates mainly through its volunteer members who organize the events and functions. We have now established cultural centres in Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban and Cape Town where we hold various activities. These venues are designed to serve their communities where people may comfortably visit and spend their time in productive engagements.
THI’s funding comes from business people who live in South Africa and do not receive any state funding from any other government. These individuals are mainly of Turkish origin and have been living in South Africa.

Activities

In order to realize our objectives we organize as many events and activities as possible. Following are examples of such activities in summary.
Iftar Dinners
Iftar dinner is a meal that is shared at the end of the day when Muslims fast. Our branches host Iftar programs during the month of Ramadan at the homes of our volunteers, at partner organizations, and at a prestigious venue where we invite community, religious and political leaders to pave way to a dialogue on that level.
Visits to other Institutions and organizations
We form formal and informal partnerships with various departments and Institutions (mostly Project-based) and pay visits to them on various occasions. These include discussion programs, lunch and dinner programs, old-age homes and orphanage visits, etc.
Cooking Classes
Cooking Classes are held at our centers for ladies. The classes are a time of fun, food, and fellowship. At each class we learn how to make several Turkish dishes, and then join together to enjoy the results!
Turkish Language Classes
For those who wish to pursue Turkish Language for varying reasons may do so at our centers. Respective branches may be contacted to enquire about the details of these classes.
Intercultural Trips to Turkey
One of our aims is to establish bridges between people of Turkey and South Africa. Turkey is a land where diverse faiths and cultures have lived in peace for millennia; it is a land of dialogue and tolerance, it is the land of long and rich history. In this regard Turkey offers much opportunities of promoting dialogue and mutual understanding.
Serving Noah’s Pudding
Observing an Islamic tradition that celebrates the landing of Noah’s ark, THI volunteers prepare and offer a special desert called Noah’s Pudding to commemorate this important event existing in Islam, Christianity, and Judaism.
Conferences and Public Lectures
We host and organize conferences and public lectures on broad range of issues concerning the wellbeing of the public. Some of such events we have done include Clash or Cooperation of Civilizations, Heroes of Peace Conference, Rumi Conference and Whirling Dervishes Performance, Abrahamic Values Public Lectures, Living Together in Peace and Harmony, etc. We do these programs in collaboration with various institutions.
Solidarity and Aid
We mobilize our volunteers and engage in relief work in the community. Poverty is one the greatest ills threatening social cohesion and relief works serve the purpose of establishing bridges between rich and poor and appreciation of each other’s circumstances. On such projects we cooperate with schools established by Turkish entrepreneurs and volunteers. These schools have a strong community links and have been performing well in their field and they also share similar values as ours especially in their approach to common universal values.
• Upcoming events
Iftar Dinners will take place during the month of Ramadaan in four cities
• Regular events
i. Friendship and Dialogue Dinner
ii. Ubuntu Lecture and Dialogue Awards
iii. Seminar Series
iv. Cooking classes
v. Turkey Trips
vi. Turkish Lessons
• Relief Work
In conjunction with other organizations THI engages in relief activities. These activities are aimed at both providing an immediate relief of those in need an also building bridges between those who have and those who do not. For various reasons there are millions today who do not have an immediate source of food and shelter and in most cases this is not through their fault. Hence we have a responsibility to reach out to them.
We also acknowledge that poverty alleviation requires long term and sustainable projects but the importance of immediate assistance should not be undermined.
• Visits
A major part of our work is to establish relationship with individuals and organizations sharing similar vision as us and cooperate in various projects. For this purpose our volunteers pay visits to individuals and organizations.

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Alex in the Northcliffe & Melville Times


Congratulations, Linda Vink, on placing this in the Northcliffe and Melville Times!  There is a link to our Facebook Group that is totally out of date.  I am trying to become an "Administrator" so I can sort it out!

Rotary student swaps Charleston for Joburg

The Rotary Club of Johannesburg New Dawn, based in Auckland Park, has welcomed Alex Gano from Charleston, Illinois in the USA.
11 February 2011
    
The 25-year-old Rotary ambassadorial scholar arrived in Johannesburg in January and will live in South Africa for the rest of the year.
"During Alex's stay in Johannesburg he will be studying a Masters in economics at Wits and will be involved in New Dawn's service projects, mainly aimed at helping children in need," said Rotary spokesman Linda Vink. "He will also further the Rotary scholarship's aims which are to promote international peace, goodwill and understanding."
Asked about his initial impressions of Johannesburg Gano said the worst that happened to him so far was that a taxi driver  threw a peanut at him. "South Africans are renowned for their hospitality and so far everything I have seen supports that reputation. I’m keen to see as much of the country as possible and will reserve judgment until I get to know South Africa well," he said.
Gano will stay in Melville and commute to Wits for classes. Back home, his mother is a social worker, his father a bankruptcy lawyer. Gano is the second oldest of three brothers.
Details: Linda Vink 011-482-1101, 082-782-4628, New Dawn on Facebook

Sunday, 13 February 2011

Alex last week, Amina this week and Rotary in Egypt.

 Our Ambassadorial Scholar, Alex Gano, spoke to us last week about his family in Iowa and University in Nashville.  It was particularly interesting hearing about his time in the Dominican Republic and his subsequent work with Spanish-speaking immigrants, both legal & illegal, in Nashville.  It certainly is a change to have an Ambassadorial Scholar who is studying economics and we are really looking forward to having you here for an extended period.
Here's Don Lindsay trying to drum up support for the cycle tour marshalling and the Humanitarian Centre.  Please support him in supporting both!

Our Speaker this week is  Amina Frense who will tell us about herself and her work with the Southern African Broadcasting Association.


RI Travel Service helps scholars flee Egyptian unrest



 
 

Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholar Jamie Gajewski was studying Arabic at Alexandria University before the civil unrest in Egypt. Rotary International Travel Service helped her and four other scholars leave the country safely. Photo courtesy Jamie Gajewski





Rotary International Travel Service (RITS) stepped in to help Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholar Jamie Gajewski and four other scholars to leave Egypt when civil unrest made it unsafe for them to complete their scholarships there.
Gajewski, from Madison, Wisconsin, USA, was studying Arabic at Alexandria University. Rotarians and Rotaractors in Egypt took good care of her from the minute she arrived in the country five months ago until her safe departure. After widespread street demonstrations erupted on 25 January, her previously safe neighborhood in Alexandria was overrun by military tanks and demonstrators.
"My neighborhood is a labyrinth of dark, narrow streets, and in front of every building there were bands of men and young boys armed with wooden planks, metal rods, knives, and guns, working together to protect their businesses and families from looters," says Gajewski. "Overnight, this safe neighborhood became unstable and dangerous." 
Gajewski says that when foreigners were urged to leave the country, Internet and cell phone interruptions made it difficult to get information about evacuations.
"I began receiving worried phone calls from Egyptian and foreign friends from all over the city," she says. "They heard reports of roving gangs armed with guns who were specifically targeting our neighborhood. Seeing as my roommate and I lived on the ground floor, our friends, including Rotaractors I met, began to devise a plan to get us out of our apartment and into a safer area."
Using a landline phone, Gajewski was able to reach her mother, Janet, who contacted RITS. Within 24 hours, RITS secured transportation to the airport, as well as a plane ticket to Kuwait. It also obtained flights out of the country for four other Rotary Scholars.
"It was pretty scary not having reliable communication with anyone. Since the Internet was shut down, all I brought to the airport was a slip of paper with my ticket number written on it," says Gajewski. "Within a few hours, I was in Kuwait and continued on to Germany, Belgium, and finally France. I'm very lucky Rotary was there to pull me out."
Gajewski says the Egyptian Rotarians and Rotaractors she met became close friends. "They were involved in every facet of my life," she says. "I never went a day without a phone call, an e-mail, or a personal visit from someone. It really was comforting to know they were there when things got bad."
She says Rotary has a strong presence in Egypt, and Rotarians are already making efforts to help in affected areas. Club members are also handing out food to families in need.
Gajewski acknowledges that it's unlikely she'll be able to return to Egypt. She is scheduled to finish her scholarship at the University of Granada in Spain.
"I wish I could have said goodbye to my friends the way I would have liked," she says. "I worry about their safety. I hope all Egyptians can achieve their goals peacefully and return the country to stability."

Monday, 7 February 2011

A Letter from Bert Ettekoven!

Hi Peter,
 
How are you all? We are fine and still going strong but are missing the New Dawn friends and the South African climate. Know that you all are welcome to stay with us when you are around. The new site looks very good.
 
Regards to everybody from a cold and windy The Hague,
 
Bert

Sunday, 6 February 2011

Our Website is up and running. The Cycle Marshals training for the future, Bert Armstrong & Steve Cleminson from Germiston Club and Alex Gano!

I've put the link to our new website in the Side Bar!

This week's Board Meeting was postponed so instead of a Business Meeting Alex Gano, our Ambassadorial Scholar, is telling us about himself a week earlier than scheduled and we will have the Business Meeting next week.

Club members rushed off, before dawn had even cracked, on Sunday the 30th January to help marshal at a cycle race near Henley on Klip.  Everyone obviously had a wonderful time and made some money for the Club whilst the blogger slept!  This is really a rehearsal for the Carnival City/Macsteel National Classic Cycle Challenge on the 27th February where we have agreed to supply 14 marshals.  Please confirm with Don Lindsay.

Steve Cleminson & Bert Armstrong (no relation) from the Rotary Club of Germiston came to talk about the race and what we have let ourselves in for!


Last, but by no means least we welcome Julian Nagy to the Club.  As you can see he already has the bit between his teeth.  Welcome Julian!

Enter the Annual Rotarian Photo Competition



The Rotarian magazine’s photography contest debuted in 1928. Since then, we’ve ditched the box cameras and flashbulbs. We no longer have to remember whether 200-speed film is for indoors or out. But the rules for what makes a great photo are as valid today as when we expounded on them in years past. So take our advice, and enter our 2011 photo contest. The theme is the spirit of Rotary, and the deadline is 31 March. Read the rules and submit your photos .
In January 1960, Randall G. Satterwhite, a member of the Rotary Club of Rochester, N.Y., USA, advised Rotarians to “Put Your Heart into Your Pictures.”
  • Photograph those things which you feel and feel strongly. The stronger your feelings, the better your picture is going to be.
  • Always know what you want to achieve before you take a picture. Some pictures are winners by sheer accident, but far more are planned well ahead. If your club sponsors a Boy Scout troop, for example, try to recall your experiences as a Scout. How did you feel the day you first put on a Tenderfoot’s uniform? Watch for good expressions on the boys’ faces. Try to put those feelings into your pictures.

In May 1960, Bruce Downes, editor and publisher of Popular Photography , laid out for readers “How I Would Win Rotary’s Photo Contest.”
  • Most amateurs do little more than take a quick look to see that things are in the center of the frame before snapping the shutter. I’d make sure that the relationship of people to people, or people to things, or things to things was right and logical and unconfused. I’d make sure that I was as close to the crux of the situation as I could get, and then I’d try to get closer to see if I could get rid of even more nonessential details around the edges. In other words, I’d make pretty darned sure that the idea as visualized in the viewfinder is clear before snapping the shutter. Somehow people expect cameras to do their thinking for them. Like pens, pencils, and typewriters, cameras never do.
  • And all the time I’d keep uppermost in my mind the guiding image and aura of service, which is the heart and soul of Rotary as I understand it. For the pictures that win prizes in this contest will be pictures that say service – pictures of people helping people all over the world – and the men and women who win the prizes are likely to be people whose devotion to service enlivens their pictures with vitality and warmth.

In November 1973, eight Rotarian photographers and editors suggested “Ways You Can Win.”
  • Jean Jacques Robert, Cannes, France (motion picture photographer) Modern photographic equipment makes picture-taking much easier than it was years ago. It permits us to grasp all that lives, all that moves, under any conditions of light and speed. The trick is to capture real life.
  • Raymond D. Conkling, Portland, Ore., USA (commercial photographer) Avoid submitting photographs that are too busy, have poor print or slide quality, weak composition, and lazy lighting. Story-telling photographs that are imaginative, have impact, and are simple and tasteful will be the ones that most judges like.
  • Dick Smith, North Conway, N.H., USA (freelance photographer) All pictures are not worth a thousand words – some hardly say anything. In choosing your subject matter, be sure that as a photograph it says something. If it needs much explaining, the photograph is weak.
  • Marc Levin, Lyon, France (editor of Le Rotarien ) There are no secrets to good photography, just logic and common sense. Study the contest rules, then start taking pictures. Then take more pictures. A contest is selection, and you must select your own best pictures from a wide variety.
  • Adolfo Casablanca, Rosario, Argentina (editor of Vida Rotaria ) The theme of the 1974 contest says it all: Rotary In Action. Avoid static subjects. Try to capture a feeling of movement. This is not always easy because photography assumes a moment of repose, even though the subjects are in movement. It helps if the picture appears to be taken by surprise, not posed. Some of the best pictures are taken by surprise! Flick your shutter when your subjects least expect it. Their expressions will be natural, and their attention will be focused on their natural activity, not you.
  • Don Brennan, Philadelphia (judge, 1960 photo contest) I always look for the unusual angle, the imaginative composition, the color and the contrast. Cropping a large scene to reduce it to its essential ingredients is a final step in producing a beautiful photograph.
  • Walter Chandoha, Annandale, N.J., USA (freelance photographer) A good photograph tells the story with a minimum of words to explain it. It is even better if it requires no caption. A good picture has a single center of interest with a minimum of distracting elements. It is tightly cropped and well balanced. Only those elements which are pertinent to the story should be included. All else should be eliminated.
  • Kakuturo Kawasaki, Tokyo (editor of The Rotary No-Tomo ) Action pictures are what I look for but rarely see enough of. Unless Rotarians get directly involved in the community, there is no way to get action snapshots. Pictures taken at regular meeting places can be a waste of film. Even if a photograph is a little out of focus, it will convey something if it has action and substance.

In September 1976, the editors advised Rotarians “How Not to Win the Rotary World Photo Contest.”
  • Here at The Rotarian , we see more examples of poor photography than we like to admit. The chief offender is those uninspired group photos – we call them “lineups” – where everyone forms ranks and stares at the camera. Or men sitting around a table. An audience watching a speaker. People shaking hands. Or passing checks. Another big loser is the head-and-shoulders portrait we call “the mug shot.” There are some interesting physiognomies out there in Rotary, but there are many better ways to show them off.

In June 2009, photographer Jean-Marc Giboux judged our contest. In “Your Best Shots,” we asked for his advice.
  • Sometimes it’s difficult when you arrive with 20 people on a project – that disrupts what’s going on, it changes it. Sometimes it’s nice to go away from the main action. You can find nice things happening on the side.

In June 2010, National Geographic photographer Karen Kasmauski explained how “Every Picture Tells a Story.”
  • The hunt for successful composition involves timing and patience. The picture you want may not be there at first. Anticipating the moment when all the elements unify into a pleasing composition is a big part of making successful pictures.