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, Aurélie 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.”
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