Sunday, 29 July 2012

Princess of Africa Foundation, a Business Meeting & Short-term Exchange Students & Rotary at the Olympics

Last week Steve Du Plessis spoke to us about the Princess of Africa Foundation and Yvonne Chaka Chaka's involvement with the club.

She really has been involved with the club and that is quite amazing when you think how busy she is.  We are lucky to have an honorary member who is much more than that!

Business Meeting
This week is a Business Meeting, the first one of the year so it's a very important one!  Our President and board members have been having sleepless nights trying to sort out the year ahead.  Monday's board meeting will be a marathon session and President Amina has advised board members to bring sleeping bags and a bottle of brandy just in case we run into the following day.

Short-term Exchange Students
Our incoming and outgoing Short-term Exchange students will be attending Wednesday's meeting if their unreliable taxi driver manages to get them to the meeting.....help...I must remember to pick them up!.......

Larissa Szecsey is here from Germany and our outgoing student, Miriam Ssebunnya from Dominican Convent School, leaves in December for Germany.


Rotarians carry the Olympic torch



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Rotarian Bob Izon carries the Olympic torch through Hereford, England, in May. Photo courtesy of Bob Izon
In 1958, Bob Izon ran the mile in world-record time in the under-16 age category, becoming the English schools champion.
But the most meaningful run of his life took place in May, when the founding member of the Rotary Club of Hereford Wye Valley, Herefordshire, England, carried the Olympic torch through his hometown.
Izon is one of several Rotarians who have carried the torch on its relay to the new Olympic Stadium in London for the opening ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympics on 27 July.
“I consider myself very fortunate to have been chosen, as half the bearers are ages 15 to 25,” he says. “It gave me a chance to pursue three objectives: inspire the younger generation, publicize Rotary’s good works, and show that a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease does not always condemn one to a nonactive life.”

Parkinson’s disease

Izon was diagnosed with the disease in 1992 but has remained active as a Rotarian, a justice of the peace, and a school board member at St. Paul’s Church of England Primary School in Hereford.
The school’s students and their parents lined the road on 24 May for Izon’s portion of the torch relay. Members of his club bore a huge banner publicizing Rotary and their upcoming charity duck race. During an all-school assembly the next day, students spent more than two hours taking turns holding the torch that had carried the flame and having their photographs taken.
“The atmosphere within the school hall was highly emotional, and quite a few of us were close to tears,” recalls Izon. “This was truly the most remarkable week in the 144-year history of the school.”
Izon’s Parkinson’s is now largely under control. In 2003, he participated in a trial procedure at the University of Birmingham Hospital, in which electrodes were placed in his brain, alleviating many of the symptoms.
He has continued to participate in Rotary service projects. Serving as a volunteer dentist on a medical mission to help Vietnamese refugees in Hong Kong years ago, he says, reminded him that millions lack access to health care.
“Having Parkinson’s, being a school governor, being a Rotarian, these have all combined to give me an effective message,” he says. “I can say to the kids, don’t give in, and they believe it.”

Other torchbearers

Ken Logan, a member of the Rotary Club of Braids, Lothian, Scotland, ran his segment of the relay in June. He was nominated in part for his role in an Edinburgh charity that delivers aid to Bosnia, for which he has raised over £10,000 through marathons and long-distance swimming.
Mike Thorn, a member of the Rotary Club of Cheam, Greater London, carried the torch through Kent in July.
“It’s an opportunity to be part of history. It’s priceless, and it doesn’t get much better than this,” says Thorn. “It’s the nearest thing to running in the Olympics.”

Rotary ready for London 2012 Olympics

Rotarians across Great Britain and Ireland are ready to welcome the 2012 London Olympic Games.
Mike Thorn - torch
Many Rotarians have enjoyed the privilege of carrying the Olympic Flame on its journey to the stadium, including Mike Thorn, Rotary Club of Cheam. Some have walked, others have run, all have felt honoured to be part of the Olympic events.
Rotary offices in London are opening their doors to all during the Games, offering a relaxing place to draw breath and provide a meeting point for Rotarians who have travelled from all over the world to support their Olympic athletes.
John Minhinick, President of Rotary International in Great Britain & Ireland (RIBI), says Rotary is ready to welcome all: "Rotary is always looking for ways to bring people together and the London Olympics is a marvellous way to make that happen. We have people from so many countries making the journey to London and the other Olympic venues, it is so fitting that Rotary is offering a welcome.
"The Rotary in London headquarters in York Gate will be open for business throughout the Games, thanks to Rotary volunteers and I believe our friends from Inner Wheel are also helping. That's not all that Rotary is doing. I have heard that Rotarians are hoping to greet people at airports, welcoming them to our country, and some are getting their hands dirty by cleaning Olympic apartments whilst raising money for good causes.
"Also, two of the RIBI youth competitions have been awarded the Inspire mark which means that they have been approved by LOCOG and are using the Olympics as a theme. The London 2012 Inspire mark is only awarded to carefully selected events which capture the spirit of the London 2012 Olympics, in recognition of their work in one of six areas: sustainability, education, volunteering, business, sport or culture. These, and the many other RIBI competitions, are open to youngsters everywhere and are well worth entering.  
"All of us in Rotary wish every Olympic athlete the best of luck this year and hopefully our local participants will pick up a few medals too."
Rotarians wishing to help the Olympics achieve success can visit the RIBI Olympic Committee pages.
RIBI is on Facebook and Twitter. Join the conversation.





Saturday, 21 July 2012

Prof Ashraf Coovadia, The Princess of Africa Foundation & New Dawn and an Interesting British Rotarian.

Professor Ashraf Coovadia gave us a very interesting talk on the Children's Memorial Institute and the Board's hopes for the future.  It's the former Children's Hospital Building that has been some what neglected but now houses a number of NGO's relating to children, from Autism SA to The Toy Library.  We aim to go there for a tour of the building and for breakfast on the 15th August.  (To be confirmed).

This week we'll allow our new President to stand out on the blog!



This Week



Steve Du Plessis will be talking to us about The Princess of Africa Foundation and how we can slot in with that as a Club.  





Board Meeting Monday 30th July chez Sligcher
That means that next week will be a business meeting, the first of the new Rotary Year, so please make every effort to attend as we will report back on sub-committees etc.

If you are looking at the Video Bar, this week it's Edith Piaf, and it says the video player is too small just click under the picture and it will play in a new window.


Rotarian no stranger to adventure


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Rotarian Robert Marshall water-skis in Saint-Tropez. The captain of a bomb-disposal squad will be helping provide security services for the London Olympics.
In the early 1980s, Robert Marshall’s father ran a Southampton restaurant that hosted evening Rotary club meetings. “There was always lots of laughing, and a few beers, but I never knew what they did,” Marshall says.
He found out four years ago when he became a Rotarian in Chertsey, outside London. Marshall, who joined the British army at age 16, is no stranger to a life of service – or adventure. His wife, Shannon, photographed him waterskiing for the first time last year, while they were vacationing in Saint-Tropez with their three teenagers. “I consumed more seawater than I did red wine that week,” he says.
In the Caribbean, he once dove off a 98-foot-high waterfall. “I didn’t get a picture of that, because Shannon dropped the camera in shock.” His plan for the next family excursion? A nearly 500-mile walk across the Pyrenees along the Camino de Santiago.
Risk is part of his job too: He’s a captain in the Royal Logistic Corps, responsible for the welfare of 140 bomb-disposal specialists. Marshall also raises money for the Felix Fund, a charity that aids bomb-disposal personnel and their families.
“When these guys are disabling a bomb, they’re absolutely on their own,” he says. “It’s just them and the bomb, and one of them is going to win.”
Usually, the squadron works in Afghanistan and other countries far from home, but this summer, it’s helping to provide security services for the London Olympics.

Monday, 16 July 2012

Sarah Mitchell, Professor Ashraf Coovadia & Rotary News from Around the World.

Last week Sarah Mitchell gave us a very interesting talk on the Sociology of Medication.  How health has become a purchasable commodity in many people's eyes and how health has become very much your personal responsibility!  It makes sense with gyms popping up everywhere and the development of a "gym culture".

Brenda Mudenda visited the club as her father is a Rotarian in Mexico and she presented us with their banner. I accepted it on behalf of our President, Amina Frense.

This Week
Our speaker is Professor Ashraf Coovadia who is the Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Board of the Children's Memorial Institute.  It is the former Children's Hospital that is now totally populated by NGO's working with children,, from Autism SA to The Toy Library.  It may be a project that would be worth a while exploring.

Prof Ashraf Hassen Coovadia

Ashraf Hassen Coovadia
Adjunct Professor   
MBChB, DCH (CMSA), Dip HIV Man (CMSA) FCP (Paed CMSA)
Principal Specialist , Dept of Paediatrics and Child Health, University of the Witwatersrand (Rahima Moosa Mother and Child Hospital, Johannesburg)
Head of Paediatric HIV Services at institution (Emilweni Services and Reseach Unit)
Completed Pleasis undergraduate training at the University of Zambia in 1990 and his paediatric postgraduate training at the University of the Witwatersrand in 1998.
Since 1998 has championed the cause of Paediatric HIV/AIDS and Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV (PMTCT).
Children Sector representative on SANAC (South African National AIDS Council).
Expert on national Paediatric Antiretroviral Treatment Guidelines and Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission (of HIV) guidelines committees and
Actively involved with research projects involving women and children who are HIV-infected.
Member of the Resuscitation Council of Southern Africa and past representative on the Paediatric Task Force of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) 2001 -2010.
Current Area of Interest – clinical trials involving HIV-infected pregnant women and children, with a view to optimising the PMTCT programme and paediatric treatment regimens.
Family – married with two teenagers, son aged 17 and daughter 15.

Mandela Day
Please bring something for the 5 C's for Mandela Day.  I suggested a bag of rice last week.  Joan Donet brought one and I forgot!  Linda Vink will collect them on Wednesday at Rotary.


It was decided last week that cooking breakfast for Children of Fire was not a possibility as the restrictions and regulations imposed have made it impossible.




Congratulations to Katinka Vreugdenhil on her engagement!




Rotary news in brief from around the globe



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The Rotary Club of Mill Point’s BHP Billiton Ramble raised more than US$20,000 for the club’s projects, Australian Rotary Health, and a telethon trust.
Rotary clubs around the globe have many things in common, including a commitment to service. All year long, clubs are taking action to make a difference in their communities. Here’s a roundup of recent club activities worldwide:
Afghanistan
After 5,000 vaccine carriers from Rotary International were delivered to Afghanistan, a ceremony was held in January at which the deputy minister of public health thanked Rotary for its work to eradicate polio in the country – one of three where the disease remains endemic. Officials from the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and USAID attended, and Rotary’s International PolioPlus Committee Chair Robert S. Scott, Pakistan PolioPlus Committee Chair Aziz Memon, and two members of the Rotary Club of Kabul received recognition.
Australia
In a cross between a treasure hunt and The Amazing Racereality competition, teams participating in the Rotary Club of Mill Point’s BHP Billiton Ramble in October set out with maps, clue sheets, and cell phones to figure out challenges at 40 locations across Perth. During the four-hour event, teams earned points by texting their answers to the problems, and some won prizes for their costumes, which included Smurfs, fairies, and cartoon characters. The 4,000 participants raised more than US$20,000 for the club’s projects, Australian Rotary Health, and the Channel 7 Telethon Trust.
Canada
The members of the Rotary Club of Edmonton Strathcona are proud to be Canadian, and are making it easy for others in their Alberta town to show their patriotism too. Through the club’s flag project, residents can pay C$50 a year to have a maple-leaf flag flown on their front lawn for Canada Day, Victoria Day, and Labor Day. The flags remain up for each holiday weekend and are then removed. The program has 600 subscribers.
Malawi
Primary school is free in Malawi, but girls often don’t finish. Of those who do, few go on to secondary school, either because their families don’t think it’s necessary or because it’s too expensive. A girls’ school, Atsikana Pa Ulendo – which translates to “girls on the move” – is providing a secondary education to those who otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford it. Two volunteer teachers, one from Canada and one from Malawi, opened the school in 2006 with support from dozens of Canadian Rotary clubs. In its first two years of operation, 10th graders had a pass rate of 98 and 100 percent on national exams, far exceeding national averages. As of 2010, the school had an enrollment of 320 students and employed 17 Malawian teachers.
Philippines
The Rotary Club of Downtown Davao, which has an entirely female membership, opened its Center for Hope in 2006 to serve women and children in the city’s Agdao slum. Last year, 56 children were enrolled in the facility’s daycare and preschool program. The Rotarians also run vocational skills training courses for mothers, free medical clinics, and children’s nutrition and youth literacy programs out of the center.
Puerto Rico
As a fundraiser, the Rotary Club of San Juan sold copies of Fondeando: Fondas, restaurantes tipicos y chinchorros/Eating Local in Puerto Rico and donated 40 percent of the proceeds to PolioPlus. The coffee table book – a guide to restaurants and cuisine that includes traditional recipes – is written in English and Spanish and was a top 10 bestseller in Puerto Rico during the Christmas season. The Rotarians raised US$1,568 for the polio eradication campaign.
Turkey
Breast cancer is the most common form of the disease among women in Turkey, accounting for 24 percent of all cases. But diagnoses and survival rates differ in urban and rural areas; in less-developed regions, most cases are not diagnosed until the late stages, and more people die within five years of diagnosis than in developed regions. Rotarians in District 2440 are working with District 6780 (Tennessee, USA) on a Health, Hunger and Humanity Grant project to educate women about breast health and early detection of breast cancer. The effort focuses on areas of Izmir Province that the Turkish Ministry of Health has identified as medically underserved.
USA
After a gunman killed eight people, then himself, in an August 2010 workplace shooting in Manchester, Conn., the Rotary Club of Manchester raised $57,600 for a memorial garden to honor the victims and $7,500 for a fund for their families. The memorial, which was dedicated on the one-year anniversary of the tragedy, includes eight stainless steel pillars engraved with the victims’ names.

Monday, 9 July 2012

Thanks, Mary!

Hi Peter,

This is Mary Zaunbrecher - the speaker and visitor at a New Dawn meeting in
Feb. 

 My daughter, Margaret, and I came from Louisiana and you were so
generous with your time. 

I did want to share that we hosted Mike Sunker and his wife Renu for a week here in my town. 


Mike is the founder of Christ Church Christian Care Centre orphanage. I set up 11 presentations for him
and he raised almost $9000 during his visit. 



I know your club continues to support this orphanage. I plan to look into writing a global grant for a
large need that Mike will identify - it may be scholarships. 

I will let you know how New Dawn can help with this grant.

Love hearing about your meetings. Stay in touch and let all know that I think so fondly of
Johannesburg. In fact. My nephew from Joburg was visiting at my home
yesterday. Such a small world.


Mary

Georg, Sarah, Pink Punter, Mandela Day Project and Maternal Health Care in Nigeria.


It was rather a small turn out last week as so many people are away at the moment.

Georg Knoke spoke of his time working with our new head of the SAPS, Ria Phiyega.  It was interesting, informative and very positive.

Fortunately we had a number of visitors!





















This week's Speaker is Sarah Mitchell
She is one of the recipients of the Scholarship we give to the Wits Department of Sociology each year.  The other recipient, Cassandra Pireu, will speak to us next month.

Pink Punter
Helping behind the bar at the Wanderers' Club las Saturday was an understatement! What a mob of pink-clothed young people!   I thought they might stop drinking to watch the Durban July as most of them had bets on it.....no ways!  They really were an exceptionally nice crowd.


Helping were Jankees & Adriaen Sligcher, Mike & Linda Vink, Peter & Jean James-Smith, Jean & Anke McSweeney, Nici Hammerschmidt, Russ Smith and DonLindsay. Thanks to all!  This 'camera pic' of Linda and Russ is the only one we have of the event.....just as well!


Mandela Day
From Linda Vink: 


The Rotary Club of Johannesburg New Dawn will be surprising one of our key projects, the Christ Church Christian Care Centre, with 67 donations on Mandela Day. This centre is based in Yeoville and provides accommodation, education, care and counselling for up to 60 homeless and destitute children of all ages.
We will also be serving breakfast on Mandela Day to a charity very close to us, Children of Fire, along with one of our members, Georg Knoke.

Please bring a packet of food stuff to Rotary on Wednesday for the 5 C's.  A Packet of Rice would be perfect.

Rotarian Action Group expands maternal health project in Nigeria




 
 

Former fistula patients in Nigeria. Photo courtesy of the Rotarian Action Group for Population Growth and Sustainable Development



In Nigeria, one out of every 18 women dies as a result of childbirth. The country has the second-highest maternal mortality rate in the world. 
That’s why the Rotarian Action Group for Population Growth and Sustainable Development targeted the northern Nigerian states of Kaduna and Kano with a pilot program aimed at reducing maternal mortality by preventing and treating obstetric fistula, a serious birth injury. From 2005 until 2010, the project, partly supported by a grant from The Rotary Foundation, reduced maternal death by 60 percent in participating hospitals, reached 1 million women of childbearing age, and repaired obstetric fistulas for 1,500 Nigerian women. 
“We have to empower women, and women cannot be empowered if they can’t make their own choices in antenatal care and child spacing,” says Dr. Robert Zinser, CEO of the Rotarian Action Group for Population Growth and Sustainable Development and member of the Rotary Club of Ludwigshafen-Rheinschanze, Germany. 
Zinser has been to Nigeria nearly 20 times to work on maternal and child health projects, including the northern Nigeria pilot focused on the prevention and treatment of fistulas. An obstetric fistula is a birth injury that can cause stillbirth and, in the mother, chronic incontinence, infection, nerve damage, or death. The primary cause is labor that goes on for too long, often for days. Because 70 percent of Nigerian women deliver at home, often without access to proper medical care, long labors that would be prevented in the developed world are more common. 
According to the World Health Organization, “prevention is the key,” Zinser says. “We insisted on a comprehensive approach of better antenatal care” that includes training, equipment, quality, hygiene, and benchmarking. 
The project also included surgery to repair damage from fistula. Many women with the injury don’t know it can be repaired, so Rotarians created a series of radio programs that explained the condition, its causes, and the available treatment. 
“People listened, and village women found out their fistulas could be repaired at the Rotary center. We repaired 1,500 fistulas, 500 more than our goal,” Zinser says. 
The action group is now preparing to replicate the project in the states of Abuja and Onoda, with plans to eventually establish the model in other central and southern Nigeria states.
Zinser is adamant that the project can be implemented in other areas with high maternal mortality. “We must save the mothers so that the mothers can save the world,” he says. 
  • The action group has a team of medical experts available to help clubs propose and implement projects in the area of maternal health. To learn more about this or how to start a project like the Nigeria pilot, visit maternal-health.org
  • Watch “The Edge of Joy,” a documentary that follows doctors, midwives, and families inside a maternity ward in Kano.
  • Read about other maternal health projects on the Rotary Voices blog.
  • Watch "Doing Good: Intro," a video about how your comtributions to The Rotary Foundation support programs like these. Contribute now.