Our Weekly Meeting

“Together, we see a world where people unite and take action to create lasting change — across the globe, in our communities, and in ourselves.”

We meet every Friday from 1:00 to 2:00pm at Wanderers Club, Illovo, Johannesburg. You can also join us on Zoom - https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86496040522.

Monday, 26 September 2016

Steven Friedman, the JYO Concert, Fellowship and Indian Surgeons in Rwanda

 Last Week
Professor Steven Friedman spoke to us about the real outcome of the local elections and how, in the métropoles,  the majority party cannot make decisions without canvasing support where as this has never happened before as the majority party has always had an overall majority and coud really do it what liked. 
How the DA learnt very quickly that it could do nothing without EFF agreement.....we live in interesting times.
.  



Johannesburg Youth Orchestra Concert, Sunday 25th September


This was supposed to be a PR event for Rotary but other than a few banners I couldn't quite see what it sought to achieve.  It was also badly supported by Rotary.  Rosebank Rotary was great.  I don't know the exact number who attended but it was certainly more than 20...maybe as high as 30.
I reckon that if you like going to concerts you go to concerts whether there is a Rotary involvement or otherwise.
The JYO was conducted by Eddie Clayton and Stephen Maycock was the soloist in Carl Maria von Weber's Clarinet Concerto No 2.

The choice of music was obviously chosen to include all the musicians, including a harpist and to show the versatility of the orchestra.  It was good to hear modern classical music.  We started with Bernstein's Overture to Candide and finished with Holst's Planet Suite.  It was a great pleasure to hear the suite in its entirety.  One of our local radio stations seems only capable of playing Jupiter though I think I caught Venus once!  I hate odd movements...all part of trivialising the arts.
Congratulations to Steven Margo for organising the event.  I hope he gets better support next time.

A Thank You from Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital 
                                                                                                                                                             

Dear Sir/ Madam,

Our palliative care team at Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital provides a vital service to the patients and their families who are dealing with life limiting, renal failure and life threatening illnesses, many of whom may not survive. This often places an enormous burden on families who have very few resources. Our multidisciplinary team of nurses, doctors and social workers as well as drivers, support patients and families in the hospital as well as in the community through home visits.

We offer support to patients and families who are in distress. This is beyond our normal duties expected of our team. From experience, we have found this to be a very valuable offering and much appreciated by those who are in need.

We need any assistance of any donations to offer our valuable patients, as same do not have food they take medication on an empty stomach. We would be very grateful if you would be able to donate any of these items.

We are so grateful for the blankets, sheets and morning slippers you donated for our patients as palliative care team (Renal Project). They were really grateful. We wish more for our patients and families.

May God multiply what you took from in many folds. Thanks a lot, May God Bless you all.

For further information, please contact me on 011 933 0260 or Dr Mpho Ratshikana-Moloko on 011 933 0051.

Warm regards

Mr. Tlou Mothata
Social Auxiliary Worker:
Wits Centre for Palliative Care

Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital                


This Week
It's a Fellowship Meeting when we talk to each other...perhaps!  It also does give the Board the opportunity to raise anything that the club should be aware of from the Board Meeting.  You will notice that Lyn Collocott is again Sergeant.  She was catapulted into the position last week and delegated the joke to Mark Franklin who must have a filing cabinet full jokes.   This week she has the time to be creative.       

   

SURGEONS FROM INDIA BRING RELIEF TO UNDERSERVED PATIENTS IN RWANDA

Photo Credit: Mussa Uwitonze
From the  of The Rotarian
Hundreds of people gather in an open-air courtyard at University Central Hospital in Kigali, Rwanda. Men in suits, women in flowered dresses, even prisoners in pink and orange gowns are waiting to find out if they will receive medical care. Some have no visible signs of injury. Others arrived on crutches, with arms in slings, or with catheters protruding from their clothing. Several have swollen, broken limbs: injuries that should have been mended long ago but were neglected because of the country’s long surgical-ward backlog, or simply poverty.
Emmanuel Mugatyawe, 36, sits on the ground as a friend fills out his yellow admissions form. He has been waiting two months for an operation to repair a broken leg – now infected – that he sustained when a car plowed into his motorbike.
“These are not routine cases; there are very few fresh injuries,” says Shashank Karvekar, an orthopedic surgeon and member of the Rotary Club of Solapur, India, after he and his Rwandan colleague Joel Bikoroti examine several dozen patients, scheduling many for surgery. Over the next eight days, a team of 18 specialized doctors (12 of whom are Rotarians) will perform surgeries on 268 Rwandan patients, including procedures in orthopedics and urology. The trip, initiated by District 3080 (India) and hosted by District 9150 (Central Africa), is funded by The Rotary Foundation with support from the Rwandan government. It’s the fourth medical mission to Rwanda that the two districts have organized since 2012. This time, among the volunteers is K.R. Ravindran, the first sitting RI president to take part in the mission.
A few buildings down on the University Central Hospital’s campus (referred to as CHUK), Rajendra Saboo, 1991-92 Rotary International president, is busy coordinating the last-minute logistics of the mission. The 82-year-old from Chandigarh, India, has done this many times. After finishing a post-presidential term on the Board of Trustees, Saboo and his wife, Usha, began to look for ways to participate in the type of hands-on service they had long encouraged of their fellow Rotarians.
They wanted to help India, a country that often receives outside assistance, make a stronger global contribution. It didn’t take long for Saboo to focus on medicine. He found that many local doctors had trained or worked in limited-resource settings similar to what they would find in Africa. “Our doctors are medically very strong,” Saboo explains. “And because India also does not have infrastructure of the highest level, they’ve learned how to innovate.”
Saboo’s first mission, to Uganda, took place in 1998 and focused on cataract surgeries and corrective operations to help disabled polio survivors. Organized with Rajiv Pradhan, a pathologist and past governor of District 3130, it consisted of doctors from Saboo’s district (3080) and Pradhan’s.
Today, Saboo recalls the mission as a life-altering experience – one so successful that the two soon arranged a trip to Ethiopia. That visit marked the start of an 18-year partnership that has brought more than three dozen surgical missions to 12 African countries, as well as Cambodia and six of India’s least developed states. Over time, the missions have increased in frequency to four per year, while adding specialties such as plastic surgery, urology, and gynecology. Saboo has been on almost every trip. “Raja Saboo is absolutely full of energy,” says Pradhan. “He’s constantly thinking of new ways to support medical missions. Even at this age, he’s working 12 hours a day.”
Rwanda, a compact central African country with mountainous topography that often draws comparisons to Switzerland, is perhaps best-known for its darkest moment: the slaughter of up to a million citizens, mostly members of the Tutsi minority, in the 1994 genocide. Twenty-two years later, it’s one of the fastest-growing economies in Africa. Kigali, its capital, is among the tidiest cities on the continent. Since 1994, life expectancy has more than doubled in Rwanda while maternal and child mortality rates have fallen.
Rwanda still faces public health challenges, however. Access to surgery is among them. According to The Lancet, an estimated 5 billion people, including nine out of 10 residents of lower- and middle-income countries, do not have access to “safe, affordable surgical and anesthesia care when needed.” In these countries, the British medical journal notes, 143 million additional surgical procedures are needed every year. Although most Rwandans are covered by national health insurance, which gives them access to low-cost care, many people living in rural areas cannot afford to get to a public health facility. Moreover, surgery is only available in five of the country’s public hospitals, and many patients must wait to be referred from local health centers or district-level facilities.
Aside from a minority of patients who can afford private care, complex cases wind up at one of two public hospitals in Kigali: CHUK and Rwanda Military Hospital, which also hosted doctors from the mission. A persistent shortage of surgeons means there’s typically a long waiting list. According to Faustin Ntirenganya, who heads the department of surgery at CHUK, the hospital employs just 10 surgeons and three anesthesiologists – a staffing shortage that, at times, means a backlog of up to 1,000 cases. Despite a growing number of surgical residents at Rwanda’s national university, the lure of better-paying jobs abroad makes holding on to specialists difficult, Ntirenganya says. “Our biggest challenge is numbers,” he says. “Our limited team cannot handle the needs of the whole population.”
The Rotary mission helps meet the high demand. In four trips to Rwanda, Saboo’s teams have conducted nearly 900 surgeries. For some patients, the mission represents a final chance. Michel Bizimungu, who had been out of work since rupturing a patellar tendon playing soccer last October, was told his case could be handled only at Rwanda’s top private hospital, at a price far beyond his means as a cleaner. Then his case was referred to Asit Chidgupkar, an orthopedic surgeon and member of the Rotary Club of Solapur. Although Chidgupkar had never encountered this specific injury, and CHUK lacked some needed equipment, including biodegradable screws and suture anchors, Chidgupkar devised a plan. The next day, in a four-hour procedure involving three separate incisions, he repaired Bizimungu’s knee. Chidgupkar called the procedure an “absolute improvisation.” (He later presented the case at an orthopedic conference in India, and he keeps in touch with Bizimungu, who updates him periodically on his recovery.) “It’s one of my most memorable cases,” he says.
The mission also provides training. Mission doctors teach cutting-edge surgical techniques to local physicians, medical students, and residents. During surgery, the visiting doctors demonstrate techniques and learn from host country doctors. Bosco Mugabo, a fourth-year resident in surgery at the University of Rwanda who assisted Chidgupkar with Bizimungu’s operation, says the opportunity was invaluable. “There are some tricks and hints that you don’t learn from school,” he says. “You learn them from a specific surgeon.”
With this in mind, Saboo worked with local health authorities to slightly modify the Rwanda mission. At a dinner in Kigali, he announced plans to invite 10 Rwandan doctors to India for three-month stints of training there – part of an effort to boost local capacity in a more sustainable manner. The next mission to Rwanda will also be smaller and focus more on teaching two in-demand specialties: reconstructive urology and anesthesiology. In addition, 20 Rwandan children will undergo open-heart surgery in Saboo’s home city of Chandigarh. With travel funds from the Rwandan Ministry of Health, 30 Rwandan children have already received such operations there. According to Emmanuel Rusingiza, one of only two pediatric cardiologists in Rwanda, the country’s high rate of rheumatic heart disease, which generally results from untreated cases of strep throat, means the country has a waiting list of more than 150 children. “A big number of them are passing away,” he says. “It’s a very hard situation.”
As the mission in Kigali winds down, Saboo is already looking forward to the next one. With more Indian districts interested in sending doctors, and African districts interested in hosting them, he expects the number of trips to increase, even if his own attendance becomes less frequent.
Many mission participants, both first-timers and veterans, say they plan to return, though it sometimes entails a significant personal and professional sacrifice. Karvekar, whose own son underwent heart surgery in India just days before he traveled to Kigali, is one of them. “I’d wanted to go on one of these trips for a while,” he says, noting that the mission was his longest absence from his family’s private clinic, where he’s the only orthopedic surgeon on staff. “There were a lot of challenging cases, but fortunately we were able to do them well and, I think, give the patients a good result.”
“It is totally a labor of love,” adds Saboo, speaking for himself as well as the team of doctors. “When they come here, there’s no compensation. They come purely because they want to extend their services to humanity beyond their own borders.”                                                                                                     

Monday, 19 September 2016

Blankets, Wheelchairs, Steven Friedman and a Cape Town Garden Project.

Last Week
This was the second time we have held Committee Meetings during a normal Club meeting and we seem to be getting the hang of it.  The whole idea is to cut down on time and where possible, traveling.

Blanket Drive & Wheelchairs.































I think  this says it all:

Good day all
Below  are the final blanket drive figures up to and including Friday 16th September
Blankets are still available if needed at the same price of R70,00 per each inclusive vat. Officially the blanket drive is now closed  

I would like to thank my committee for their support and dedication in assuring that the project ran smoothly and not forgetting the clubs that participated without who there would not have been a blanket drive – Thank you one and all for another successful project

Please pass this message onto your club members

28 clubs participated  The top 4 clubs being :
Rosebank collected R162,705 ,00 but at this stage is closely followed by
Morningside who collected  R143,300 , 00 With a possible last order still to come in  to the value of R20,000 ,00 which will make them the leading club
The Great Train Race collected R84,816 ,00 AND Sandton in 4th position collected R70,000 00

3 clubs still need to finalise orders – Rosebank 255 blankets ; Northcliff  73 blankets and Morningside 56 blankets

11098 regular blankets were sold.

Considering the competition we had this year Well done to all
 
With thanks and kind regards

Yours In Rotary 




Steve

Chair Blanket Drive


S F Margo


STEPHEN   FRANK MARGO




We have also had a couple of letters from the St Vincent de Paul Society Malvern thanking us for blankets and wheelchairs.....but they are not really legible here.







































Congratulations to David Bradshaw (Blankets) and Roger Lloyd (Wheelchairs).

Paul Harris



Melodene Stonestreet sent me this photograph of a plaque at the White House in Washington sent to her by her daughter Kerry.

We don't have a photograph of Kerry but we can assume that those are her feet.










This Week
Our speaker is Professor Steven Friedman who is no stranger to our club.  I don't know what he is going to talk about.  It depends on what political dramas take place before Friday.

Steven Friedman is Director of the Centre for the Study of Democracy at Rhodes University and the University of Johannesburg.
He is a political scientist who has specialised in the study of democracy. He researched and wrote widely on the South African transition to democracy both before and after the elections of 1994 and has, over the past decade, largely written on the relationship between democracy on the one hand, social inequality and economic growth on the other. In particular, he has stressed the role of citizen voice in strengthening democracy and promoting equality.
He is the author of Building Tomorrow Today, a study of the South African trade union movement and the implications of its growth for democracy, and the editor of The Long Journey and The Small Miracle (with Doreen Atkinson), which presented the outcome of two research projects on the South African transition. His current work focuses on the theory and practice of democracy and his study of South African radical thought Race, Class and Power: Harold Wolpe and the Radical Critique of Apartheid will be published in 2015. He writes a weekly column in Business Day on current political and economic developments.

GROWING A FUTURE IN CAPE TOWN

Photo Credit: Courtesy of Abalimi Bezekhaya
On a drive along the N2 Freeway in Cape Town, South Africa, travelers speed past endless clusters of corrugated metal shacks that fill the sandy Cape Flats area between the airport and iconic Table Mountain.
“I grew up in this area,” says Lloyd Whitfield, a retired dairy products company owner and member of the Rotary Club of Constantia, pointing out where his family once owned land. “There was just bush. I used to ride horses, and we used to shoot game in this area – there was nothing.”
Now, more than a million people are crowded here, the townships established when black residents were forcibly relocated out of “white areas” during the apartheid years. More recently, the townships are the destination for hundreds of thousands of migrants seeking to benefit from Cape Town’s growing economy.
But the rate of migration has outpaced job growth.
The Constantia Rotary Club has helped set up a community garden and farm training center for young residents in Khayelitsha, the largest township. The club is working with Abalimi Bezekhaya, a local organization that helps create income-producing gardening opportunities in the community, and partnered with Rotary clubs in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Germany to secure a global grant from The Rotary Foundation worth $46,000, on top of a previous matching grant.
“The philosophy behind both projects is to try to get young people, men and women, into the gardens,” says Kelly Winckworth, treasurer of the Constantia club. “Traditionally, this kind of work is older people, and largely women.”
Settled in a grassy park across from a subdivision of modest brick homes is the Moya we Khaya Peace Gardens plot. The garden adds to Abalimi’s farming capacity and creates more financial stability for the organization.
“We grow everything,” says Abalimi operations director Christina Kaba, who works in the garden with about a dozen others, growing pumpkins, green peppers, basil, thyme, tomatoes, carrots, cabbage, and lots of other vegetables and herbs. Those vegetables supply Abalimi’s Harvest of Hope venture, which sells boxes of vegetables to middle-class Capetonians for a monthly fee.
The Constantia Rotary Club first developed a 5,000-square-meter garden on city land with Abalimi in 2013, installing infrastructure such as an irrigation system and protective fencing.
“The first challenge was the land,” says Nancy Maqungo, Abalimi board member and farmer. “We wanted the land from 1995 – think how many years. We’ve attended so many meetings, but we couldn’t get the land. But Rotary helped us. That was the first problem that we had. Getting people to come here was no challenge. They did come.”
In fact, the garden was so popular that community members asked the club to help establish another one. That added 5,000 square meters to the original garden, making it an even hectare (just under 2.5 acres).
Another early problem was the sandy soil. “The soil was very poor,” Whitfield says. Compost and manure were added, but no fertilizers, to keep the soil organic.
Finding enough partners to get the funding for the land presented another challenge. Whitfield, a longtime Rotarian and past district governor, interested other Rotary clubs through his many connections. The project was made more attractive by the team of professionals within the Constantia club, including an architect, engineers, project managers, management trainers, and an accountant.
At the garden in November, the growing season was well underway. Rows of green plants brightened the plot. A hadeda ibis, a brown-gray bird with iridescent wings, picked through the dirt inside a tunnel greenhouse. Part of the tunnel covering had been torn away, stolen to become part of somebody’s shack, Winckworth says.
Despite these occasional setbacks – early in the project, all of the water valves on the Rotary-sponsored irrigation system were stolen – farmers say the garden is a safe oasis in the community, providing income, motivation, and a healthy source of food.
“We chat and we help one another in many ways,” Maqungo says. “We learn a lot, because there are quite a number of vegetables that I didn’t even know. … When I came here I said, ‘Christina, what is this, and how do you – ?’ and I would Google the recipes. And I would share the recipes with other women here.”
As interest in the gardens grew, a third project aimed to redevelop an existing garden and build training facilities for young, unemployed people, who could benefit from the knowledge of the older farmers. Not far from the Moya gardens at another site in Khayelitsha, the Constantia Rotary Club helped set up the Young Farmers Training Centre.
The facility is central to keeping local garden plots in use, says Chris D’Aiuto, Harvest of Hope production coordinator.
“What’s neat about this is not only are we engaging youth who do not have jobs and giving them a vocation, but also we’re able to then say, ‘We have land for you in these other community gardens that have space,’” he says. “So not only does it give meaning to some people’s lives, but then also we’re able to give them the space they need to produce.”
The center completed a trial training session in fall 2015 and launched a formal yearlong training program for nine young people in April. Rotary will stay involved until at least September 2017 to ensure the program can run on its own. To that end, Rotary required Abalimi to partner with another organization, in this case Netherlands-based Avalon.
The training offers both practical instruction and theory, covering topics such as soil preparation, seedling production, cross-pollination, organic growing, and climate change.
“I learned a lot every time I attended the classes,” says Zandile Hlangwana, a 25-year-old farmer. “It was very encouraging to work with other young people practically outside, and the way we just discussed everything inside … I think some of us actually found a way toward what we wanted to do in the future after the apprenticeship.” 

Monday, 12 September 2016

Committee Meetings this week, Vegetables, District 9400 Concert, Middelburg Video & Service.

Last Week
Geoff Green returned to tell us how to grow vegetables at home.  I must admit he makes it sound very complicated....just look at the picture!  Some of our members blanched at the thought of having to dig the soil down to about waist height!
It was an interesting talk all the same as he emphasised the need to create the right soil.  I did wonder if it wasn't cheaper to buy vegetables, even at Woolworth's prices.

Mike Lamb was amongst the many who had returned from holiday and he brought us a banner,

This is where Mike attended their meeting.....

 Meeting Information...

Thatchers Hotel
(formerly The Ramada)
Guildford Road,
East Horsley,
Surrey.We meet on Thursdays at 19.30 Thatchers Hotel
(formerly The Ramada)
Guildford Road,
East Horsley,
Surrey. KT24 6TBtel: 01483 280500

Looks a very nice place to meet though I hate to think how much the dinner cost in Rands!

Rotary Concert

I have forwarded this to Melodene to take the bookings stonestreet@mweb.co.za as it would be great to have a block booking for the Club.



THE JOHANNESBURG YOUTH ORCHESTRA COMPANY
in collaboration with
      ROTARY DISTRICT 9400

Presents


JYO SYMPHONY CONCERT 2016

with


The Johannesburg Youth Orchestra

Conducted by 
Eddie Clayton

Featuring soloist
Stephen Maycock (Clarinet)


Sunday, 25 September, 2016 at 15:00
UJ Arts Centre Theatre
Kingsway Campus, Auckland Park


Tickets are R150 per person
Which includes a free cup of tea.
(Students, pensioners and groups of 10 or more – R120)

Bookings through Computicket
For more information phone (011)484 1257 or 
email info@orchestracompany.org.za 

This Week - Committee Meetings
We will have the Board Meeting on Friday 23rd, after our normal Rotary Meeting.

Rotary Club of Middelburg Video
This is a brilliant video about a joint Education Project between Middelburg and a Canadian Rotary Club.  It has only had 17 views since April.....there is something wrong there.



SERVICE: THE MOTIVES BEHIND MOTIVATION

Illustration by Dave Cutler
From the  of The Rotarian
You may be surprised to learn that in 1905, when Rotary began, it was not based on the idea of Service Above Self. Instead, the two main aims of the Chicago club were “the promotion of the business interests of its members” and “good fellowship and other desiderata ordinarily incident to Social Clubs.”
But for Paul Harris, that wasn’t enough. He wanted a club that would get involved in civic affairs and benefit the community. 
A prospective member, Chicago attorney Donald Carter, had been “struck by the selfish character of the organization,” according to Harris biographer Fred A. Carvin. The two conspired to introduce a Third Object of Rotary: “the advancement of the best interests of Chicago.” As Harris later remembered, “I concluded that the most practical method of introducing community service would be to find a worthy cause and then induce members to work for it.”
The club began by buying a horse for a farmer whose animal had died. Members also provided a newsboy with a suit of warm clothes. All along, Harris was planning bigger things, creating a committee to find civic projects for Rotary to participate in. The first issue it addressed was the lack of public restrooms downtown. There was only one choice at the time – a saloon. Once there, it was said, men could be tempted to take a drink or two. As for women, entering such an establishment was simply out of the question.
So Harris and his committee persuaded the Chicago City Council to fund public facilities to the tune of $20,000 (almost $500,000 today) in taxpayer money. And Chicago Rotarians got so much satisfaction out of seeing their work get results that “Service Above Self” became an operating principle, although it didn’t become one of our official mottoes until 1950.
In Rotary, it never has been easy to get every member – or sometimes even most members – involved in community projects. Many people join because they want to give back to society, and community service is what Rotarians often say makes their membership worthwhile. But clubs still struggle to find projects that will inspire their members and attract new ones.
Rotarians enjoy the meals, the socializing, the networking, and the fundraisers, but when a community service project comes up, often they are suddenly “too busy.” Too busy for service after you’ve joined a service organization? Every club leader I’ve ever talked to has heard it.
A major factor standing in the way of greater involvement is “time aversion,” according to Americus Reed, a professor of marketing at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. All of us have limited time on earth and we are, consciously or not, very choosy about how we spend it. In a series of studies, Reed and his colleagues showed that service-oriented people such as Rotarians are most likely to spend their time on specific charitable acts if they are given “moral cues” about how good a particular action will make them feel after they volunteer.
“Giving time more strongly reinforces the moral self, compared with giving money,” Reed and his co-authors say in “I Don’t Want the Money, I Just Want Your Time,” a paper recently published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. The research suggests that if club leaders want people to happily volunteer, they will first acknowledge that community service can be hard to fit into a busy life. Then they must work to associate the project with positive outcomes and feelings such as self-expression, connectedness, meaning, and joy.
Another way to make volunteering more rewarding is to make sure that each person is able to express his or her inner motivations. The Three Needs Theory, proposed by psychologist David McClelland in the 1960s, shows that most people are primarily motivated by one of three factors: achievement, affiliation, or power. Achievement-oriented people like to work on concrete tasks where excellence is valued and a sense of closure can eventually be found. Affiliation-oriented volunteers want to work in groups and have interactions with recipients of service efforts. Power-motivated people prefer to be in charge and are happy giving advice or being involved in tasks that result in personal recognition.
Assigning people to volunteer activities based on those personality traits is likely to result in happier volunteers who continue to offer their time, even if they may not be quite sure why their Rotary activities suddenly seem to fit so well. But if a full-fledged application of the Three Needs Theory seems a bit manipulative, consider the method used by the 69-member Rotary Club of Schaumburg-Hoffman Estates, Ill., to create more satisfying community service projects over a five-year period. The club has moved from doing one-off projects to developing ongoing projects to meet some of their community’s most pressing needs.
“Clubs that have community service projects that are soul-satisfying to all members are rare,” says Eileen Higginbotham, the club’s community service chair. “Even if a majority of members say they are happy with current projects, membership changes and people develop new interests.”
Higginbotham decided to lead an effort to find the projects that would have the greatest impact in the community and then motivate members by matching their talents to them. Club leaders, she says, “realized that we didn’t really know what our members even thought about community service.”
The first step was to ask members, in detail, what they wanted from their club. A 16-question assessment of club activities, including community service, resulted in an almost 100 percent response rate. “It gave us more confidence in what we were proposing to the club,” Higginbotham says. “You can put a lot of work into a project and then find that people don’t want to do it.”
The club then explored its community’s needs by “following the money.” They sent members out to ask organizations they had supported over the years what they really needed in a hands-on project. And they found out that many of their assumptions were a little off. Local seniors, for example, wanted a place to go on Saturdays, but the senior center sometimes had only one person working and could accommodate only about 25 people. Now “Rotary Social Saturday” brings in as many as 70 people. “The Rotarians who asked organizations about their needs have become our ambassadors to them,” Higginbotham says. These close connections ensure that as needs change, the club’s response can change quickly, too.
Clubs are on a never-ending quest for great projects – and for ways to motivate members to participate in them. The trick is to find the project that meets your members’ needs as well as your community’s.

Monday, 5 September 2016

Onyi Nwaneri & Africa Tikkun, Play Pumps, TJ Acoustic & Earthquakes in Italy

Last Week
Onyi Nwaneri, who has a title much longer than her name, Head: Development, Marketing & Communications, regaled us with the amazing work that Afrika Tikkun does in South Africa.  She gave us an extremely interesting overview of our country and what resonated with many of us was that only 4% of the population pay tax.  I rather wondered if that wasn't a decreasing percentage?  Maybe inflation keeps it stable.

There are so many NGO's involved in training, education, job creation as well as government and service organisations like Rotary.  The small tax base really makes one appreciate the need for the work these organisations do to try and improve the lot of the majority of the population.

We have partnered with Afrika Tikkun in the past and maybe we should explore joint opportunities again.

Play Pump Kuruman District
Brian Leech has ensured that the Play Pump approved at the Club Assembly was installed last week.  This really is a worthwhile project as it is completely sustainable and fits in with one of Rotary International's areas of focus.  Many thanks, Brian.  Let's hope that we have sufficient funds to install the one that was proposed for the Free State.
















The TJ Acoustic Club
This was attended by Richard Tonkin, Cuthbert Gumbuchooma, myself and our partners.  It was an interesting evening with various 'turns' of varying quality taking the stage.  It was also inexpensive at R25 per head to get in and the most expensive dish on the menu was R45.  They seem to be interested in doing something with Rotary and we will see what pans out.

Lunch
We seem to have got it right....thank you everyone for your cooperation.  The next step is to see that it arrives on time!

This Week
Back by popular demand!  Geoff Green, as requested, is going to talk to us about growing vegetables at home as opposed to the townships.  Is this the beginning of the Rosebank Rotary Vegetable Fellowship I wonder?  My cucumber is bigger than yours?  We shall see.

This barren piece of ground became a vegetable garden and I'm sure our back gardens look nothing like this!





Blanket Drive
David Bradshaw attended the Blanket Drive Breakfast on our behalf.  It will be interesting to hear what he has to say.

Rotary Family Health Days
John Symons has this in hand and is contacting Morningside Club so that we can partner with them again this year.

SHELTERBOX AND ROTARY CLUBS TAKE ACTION FOLLOWING EARTHQUAKE IN ITALY

Buildings lie in ruins Wednesday, after a magnitude 6.2 earthquake leveled towns in central Italy. The quake killed at least 241 and left thousands homeless.
Photo Credit: Massimo Percossi/ANSA via AP
A 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck central Italy early Wednesday, killing more than 240 people and trapping an unknown number beneath rubble. Tremors were felt as far away as Rome, 100 km (65 miles) southwest of the quake's epicenter.
International disaster relief agency and Rotary International project partner  is sending a response team from its headquarters in the United Kingdom to the remote mountainous area of Italy where the destruction is most severe. The response team will arrive Friday, 26 August, to assess the area's needs.
Luca Della Volta, president of , the affiliate organization in Genoa, will accompany the response team. Della Volta is working with the Rotary Club of Rieti in District 2080, the club closest to the earthquake-affected sites, and will meet with officials of the Italian Civil Protection Department, fire department, and Red Cross to coordinate efforts.
If families and individuals made homeless by the disaster need emergency shelter, ShelterBox will send tents and other equipment from its locations in Italy and other sites across Europe. Della Volta says the most urgent need is for tents and relief supplies for the hospital of Rieti, where most of the patients from the destroyed hospital in Amatrice were taken.
"I am truly heartbroken over what has happened," says Della Volta, charter president of the Rotary E-Club of 2042 Italia. "As Rotarians, we are always available to help people in need."
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Rotary Districts 2080 and 2090 in Italy have created a joint fundraising campaign to help communities damaged by the quake. Visit their Facebook pages for more information: