Sunday, 26 June 2011

Roly Boardman, Dinner in the Olive Garden and Rotary Fellowship Month.

Roly Boardman, Director of Impact Human Resources and Chairman of the Ethics Committee of the Association of Personnel Service Organisations, was our speaker last week.  I think we were all rather shocked to discover that recruitment agencies are not regulated and anyone can print a card saying that they are a recruitment consultant.  I was talking to my printer yesterday and asking if I could handle all his recruitment in the future for a fat fee, of course.  He didn't look convinced but I am working on it!


It was the first meeting for Jankees Sligcher as our new President.  As you can see he looks happy in the job.  Our official photographer, Jenine Coetzer, is currently exploring the fleshpots of Anatolia and I suddenly remembered to leap out of my seat and take a few photos right at the end of the meeting.  I cannot match her flare!   We have so many members travelling at the moment, including our President who is vanishing to the Nederlands for a couple of weeks.


This Wednesday is the 5th Wednesday of the month when we move our regular meeting to the evening and just have fun.  Steve Du Plessis has organised Ilk Giardino Degli Ulivi, an Italian restaurant at 44 Stanley, for our evening out.  He says any time after 6,00pm.  It's also the preview night for Exclusive Books Sale so, if need be, you can come along after braving the opening.  They recently took over what used to be the Royal Enfield Motorcycle Showroom so there is plenty of space for us.  Confirm that you are coming with Steve Du Plessis 


There is no Breakfast Meeting this Wednesday!







I recently discovered this youthful picture of our Ambassadorial Scholar, Alex Gano, holding a flag at the Rotary Conference.  It looks as if he was a Finn at the time.  I assume that he has now given up his Finnish nationality and reverted to US citizenship.


This month is Rotary Fellowship Month.  That's not just having an evening such as we are having on Wednesday.  A Rotary Fellowship a number of Rotarians with a similar interest or hobby who have formed an international association.





Rotary Fellowships




Rotary Fellowships are autonomous, international groups of Rotarians, Rotarian spouses, and Rotaractors who join together to:
  • Share a common interest in worthwhile recreational activities (sports, hobbies, etc.) 
  • Further their vocational development through acquaintance with others of the same profession 
  • Make new friends around the world
  • Explore new opportunities for service
  • Have fun and enhance their Rotary experience 
Learn more about Rotary Fellowships.

How to get involved?

Consider joining a Rotary Fellowship that addresses your interest. To get started  
  • View complete list of Rotary Fellowships.
  • Consult the Rotary Fellowship Directory to get in touch with group(s) you're interested in. 
  • View a list of Suggested Rotary Fellowships and offer to help organize a prospective fellowship.

How to organize a new Rotary Fellowship?

Forming a new Rotary Fellowship takes a lot of work, but as Rotarians who have established a group will attest, the effort is worthwhile.  Before submitting a proposal, plan to develop a strong network of prospective members in at least three countries.  You can start by posting your idea on the list ofSuggested Rotary Fellowships
While Rotary Fellowships operate independently of Rotary International, they must receive official recognition from RI’s Board of Directors and operate in accordance with Rotary policy. If you are interested in organizing a prospective Rotary Fellowship, please contact RI staff for guidance.

Sunday, 19 June 2011

Jankees's Induction and the Club Launch of the Malaria Campaign

Let's start with the Induction of Jankees Sligcher as the 4th President of the Rotary Club of Johannesburg New Dawn at our breakfast last week.  First, the fun.   Ian Widdop was entertaining as MC.  He looks as if he exhorting us to come up and be saved!  And he obviously is not mad on his breakfast either!  Lots of toasting and drinking champagne.  Linda Vink invited her mother to join us.  Jankees was caught with a gob-stopper in his mouth and Shirley Downie and Allan Beuthin are just enjoying themselves.  Arthur Begley is back from the wilds of Kazakhstan albeit but briefly and he is obviously delighted to be with Lucille Bloomberg & Niel Chen!  Mike Vink believed in serving the croissants and Judith Sligcher looks apprehensive.

 President Graham Donet handed out President's Award Certificates...a nice touch.....and after his brief resume of the year the serious part of the meeting took place.  Jankees Sligcher was led, like a lamb, to the slaughter.  I suppose we shouldn't really tell Presidents Elect about the true nature of their induction prior to receiving the badge...cold baths, sword dancing...all of those dangerous things.....because it makes them nervous.



The moment came!  And afterwards photographs with his wife, Judith, PDG Shirley Downie and our outgoing AG Billy Philips.  Arthur Begley presented the Club with $1 000 in notes and more dollars and lots of money was raised by our weekly brag.

You can see that we ended up with a very happy President for 2011 - 12!




Our Speaker this week is Roly Boardman, Director of Impact Human Resources and Chairman of the Ethics Committee of the Association of Personnel Service Organisations



Two days later Jankees hosted, at his home, his first official function.  The internal launch of the Rotary Club of Johannesburg New Dawn's Malaria Campaign.  This was conceived by Steve Du Plessis and has been taken up by District 9400, the Africa Zone and also by Rotary internationally.  One of the major fund-raising methods to buy mosquito nets is a song to be recorded next week by Yvonne Chaka Chaka who is the UNICEF Ambassador for the eradication of Malaria.  All over the world people will be able to down-load the song from the internet for the cost of a mosquito net.  There are also bead bracelets to be sold that not only provide money for nets, sprays etc  but they also provide employment for a group of women (and a couple of men) in Khayelitsha.   We are hoping that, as well as assisting with the distribution of nets and sprays we will be able to increase the number of people employed in making the bracelets.  Nandos and the explorer, Kingsley Holgate, have been involved in the Malaria Campaign for quite some time and now Rotary International will also be involved.


At our little party President Jankees hosted Yvonne Chaka Chaka, Louis Da Gama, her Humanitarian Advisor, and PDG Shirley Downie who heads the District PR & Communications Committee and has already promoted the Malaria Campaign at the Rotary International Conference in New Orleans.  Despite the evening having a serious side it was also great fun.  IT IS ONLY THE BEGINNING!
As you can see representatives of our two Interact Clubs were also there, the Dominican Convent School, Belgravia and Mcauley House School



.

Monday, 13 June 2011

The AGM, the Rotary Conference and a little bit more......

 This is how serious we all looked at the Club's AGM last week.  Other than Allan Beuthin who seems to be praying for guidance and me holding the Book of the Blog, Volumes 1 & 2 put together by Linda Vink as archival material as it reflects the history of the Club since its Charter Date.  It was a very successful AGM though the accounts cannot be finalised until after the 30th June.  Congratulations, President Graham Donet, on moving the Club forward this year.
 Here's our Rotary Conference Contingent, as well as our outgoing ADG Billy Philips and his wife Glo, at the Gala Dinner in Gaborone, Botswana.  Alex distinguished himself by speaking well at Conference and charmingly uttering a few home truths about the need for Rotary to reflect the demographics or die.

The first time I went a Rotary Conference was about 1989 with my previous District when I belonged to Bloemfontein Club.  It was held in Kimberley and I vividly remember the comments made to me by a Club member before I went.  "Don't think it is a real conference as nothing is ever discussed and you will just watch presentations."  That hasn't changed but this time the presentations were generally much better than in the past.  The other things he said was "It's an excuse for old men to give each other medals and pat each other on the back."  It certainly wasn't true this year as personal awards were very few and those made were much deserved.

The real value of the Conference is social and, more importantly, establishing contacts with individuals and their Clubs where we can mutually co-operate.  There we were successful.  President Graham Donet will give us his report on the Conference in due course.

This week is our special Champagne Induction Breakfast to welcome President Elect Jankees Sligcher as our President for 2011 - 2012.



I took this photograph on the way back from Gaborone as I think it really encapsulates what Jankees has ahead of him.  In fact this is what every Office Bearer at every level in Rotary will have to contend with as every position changes in the coming year.  Fortunately Rotary is a team effort so Jankees will be able to do a bit of muck spreading and our support for him is guaranteed.


This is RotaryEN from Rotary International on Vimeo.

Monday, 6 June 2011

Last Week, the Spinathon & Much Much More!


 I wasn't at last week's meeting as I felt a cold coming on...and it came on and on and ON!  Thanks to our official photographer, Jenine, I can see that the meeting had a horticultural feel, Don Lindsay is back from Turkey and Jankees Sligcher has been punting our projects in Holland and they gave him a banner!  Also faces from our Membership Evening, WELCOME!

Judging by the Spinathon pictures it wasn't only anguish, though that is etched on a few faces, but it was also sartorial and gastronomical!















This is just to prove that I really did duty at the Rotary Humanitarian Centre on Saturday as here is a happy customer taking away books for a junior school on the East Rand!

This week's meeting is our  AGM so please make a real effort to be there!


And listen to the Brilliant Pretty Woman Track by Roy Orbison in the Video Bar!
An End of Rotary Year Message from President Graham Donet:


What a momentous year!  This will be my last opportunity to address you all in the Blog as President and I would like to recap on some of our achievements in this Rotary Year.

Firstly, thanks to all of you for your support and commitment over the year – it could not have been achieved without you all.

There have been some members who have truly excelled in this past year and I would like to acknowledge them. 
Firstly to Joan Donet for picking up the baton with New Generations from Ian Widdop.  That we have two Rotaract Clubs up and successfully running as well as regular RYLA participation is due to her hard work and perseverance.
To Mike and Linda Vink for taking in Alex Gano, our Ambassadorial Scholar, and providing him with the necessary support to get established in his own apartment in Melville; on behalf of the club I thank you.  To Linda for the amazing coverage for the club in the local newspapers as well as Rotary Africa.  Linda is also putting together a Memory Book of the happenings in the club since our inception.  To Mike for dealing with all the requests from District – reams of documentation over the year! Also for weekly secretarial duties.  Thanks Mike, I could not have done it without your support.  To PP Peter James Smith for our incredibly professional and informative blog – Peter you excelled yourself in projecting the dynamic image of this club!  Linda has also compiled all the blogs since our inception and it makes for interesting reading.  To Lucille Blumberg for quietly getting on with the Wheelchair Project and making it such a success.  And to PP Don Lindsay, thanks for being an anchor of strength to both myself and the club over the last year.
I am very proud of our District involvement, both in this year and for the year ahead and my thanks go here to Mike Vink, Peter James Smith, Steve du Plessis and Jan Kees Sligcher for their involvement at District level on behalf of New Dawn.
It’s been a tough year, with some sad member resignations, but this has been countered with great new members joining the club, and with a few new ones in the pipeline for the new year.

We’ve always said that our club would be different.  We’ve had some great fun over the year, and I have been personally enriched by the interaction with all of you. 
To our incoming President, Jan Kees Sligcher, good luck for 2011/12 and I know that you have the support of the club members and especially myself, in the year ahead.    

Graham Donet
President
Rotary Club of Johannesburg New Dawn


Our Ambassadorial Scholar, Alex Gano, always takes our Club much too seriously.  I know we talked about the need for more financial expertise in the Club particularly if we want access big corporate money.  Alex told Trevor Manuel to forget the IMF as he is unlikely to get the job but Johannesburg New Dawn needs him more.  Alex will no doubt give us feed back at Wednesday's Meeting.



Eradicating polio will take renewed resolve, says Gates




 
 

Bill Gates addressed Rotarians during the third plenary session of the 2011 RI Convention 24 May. Rotary Images/Monika Lozinska-Lee
Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, praised Rotary for its continued success in the effort to eradicate polio, but cautioned that Rotarians will need to redouble their efforts to keep the disease from spreading -- and threatening hundreds of thousands of children.    
Gates, the keynote speaker at the third plenary session of the 2011 RI Convention, 24 May in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, said that because of Rotary, there are many places in the world where polio is no longer considered a threat. 
“That’s a blessing and a curse,” said Gates. “The blessing is that in many places, polio is a disease of the past. The curse is that it is now harder for us to raise awareness that, in some places, polio is also a disease of the present. If we fail to help leaders around the world understand this, polio is certain to be a disease of the future.” 
Download the speech, watch highlights of the plenary, or view the entire speech on the Gates Foundation website.
Gates praised Rotary for reducing the incidence of polio by more than 99 percent worldwide since 1988.  
“Your work has brought us so far,” he said. “I’m so proud to be a partner in the work that Rotary has been doing to eradicate polio.” 
Gates noted that only one case of polio had been reported in India this year, as of March. 
“India is approaching zero cases,” said Gates. “None of this would have been remotely achievable had it not been for Rotary. We would not be where we are without you. Nor can we get to where we’re going without you.” 
Gates said that he and his wife, Melinda, have made eradicating polio their foundation's top priority. With the world on the threshold of eradication, the hard work really begins, he said.  
“Polio eradication has been our single biggest investment in recent years, as far as innovation and creativity. The last 1 percent will be the longest and hardest 1 percent,” he said. “It will require more work and more commitment than ever before. Without the redoubled effort of everyone in this room, and your fellow Rotarians around the world, we will not succeed. Redoubling is crucial to ending polio.” 
The Gates Foundation has awarded two grants totaling US$355 million to Rotary in support of its work in eradicating the disease. Rotary has responded with Rotary's US$200 Million Challenge . To date, Rotarians have raised $173.2 million for the challenge. 
Gates said he plans to work with Rotary leadership to keep polio front and center in the public eye. “You have helped so many people understand that we are ‘this close.’ I challenge you to make your voices louder.” 
Countries including Canada, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, and the United States have all increased their investment in the eradication effort. Gates attributed that success to the pressure Rotarians have put on the leaders of those countries. But he noted that with a funding gap of $400 million next year for the Global Polio Eradication Initiative , it is no time to let up. 
“If we fail, the disease will not stay at its current low level,” he said. “It will spread back into countries where it’s been eliminated, and will kill and paralyze hundreds of thousands of children who used to be safe.” 
Gates said that the monuments Rotarians have illuminated with the End Polio Now message  are powerful images.  
“But ultimately, the most important monument won’t be the one we illuminate,” said Gates. “It will be the one we create.”