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, 8 October 2018

Visitors, Rotary Youth Leadership Course, Quiz Prep, Security and Modern Slavery

Last Week
PP Lyn Collocott exchanges banners with John Palmer of the Rotary Club of  Akron Ohio
Monica Kiwanuka
We expected a small meeting with President Jean and other Rotarians in the Magaliesberg for our annual Youth Leadership Weekend so it was a pleasant surprise seeing how many were there to hear David Bradshaw talk about Rotary Friendship Exchange.  David us an enthusiastic member of the District Friendship Exchange Committee and the next Exchange will be with Mexico and you will all have received the notice direct from District.

We also hosted two visiting Rotarians and a student enquiring about short term youth exchange.
Masega Matiku

John Palmer from Ohio USA told us about the annual camp that his club runs for physically and mentally challenged children.

Monica Kiwanuka from the Rotary Club of Johannesburg North Central had dropped one of her children off in Rosebank and had time to spare so thought she would pay us a visit.

Masega Matiku, who is studying drama at National School of the Arts came to ask us about Short Term Youth Exchange only to discover the Youth Committee were all in the Magaliesberg.





Rotary Youth Leadership Course
President Jean has already written about this in her column and, as you know, we cannot publish photographs of minors without parents'consent if faces are visible.  Fortunately we do have permission to add pictures of the team.




















But here are a couple of photos of the event....but not the fun ones!

















Dinner Lau's Restaurant, Cyrildene
I have circulated everyone about this and so far two have responded.  Please come back to me as soon as possible.



Interclub Quiz Friday 16th November

A team consists of a table of 10 which can be anyone.  Obviously it would be us and partners or the Anns might like to have their own team including their partners.  Intelligent children would be very welcome as would intelligent friends.
It was hinted to me that Johannesburg Club reckon they would win easily because they have so many old knowledgeable members.  I don't really think we should get them away with that!
I wonder how many of them have heard of Drake, Eminem or Ariana Grande?

Please email Pam Donaldson pmmdonaldson@gmail.com with your list of those who are going for the honour of Rosebank.







Christmas Lunch
It will be on Friday 7th December this year.

This Week
It's a topic than concerns us all, Security and our speaker is Gavin Henry, Chairman of the Bedfordview Community Policing Forum.  As our own Costa Qually is the Chairman of the Rosebank Community Policing Forum it should make an interesting lunchtime.

Here is an article from the Bedfordview&Edenvale News that gives an idea of some of the things Gavin Henry is involved with.

In revealing its plans for the year ahead, the Bedfordview Community Policing Forum (BCPF) said it expects 2016 to be as challenging as the previous year.
Chairperson Mr Gavin Henry said the goals and plans set by the forum cannot be achieved without the financial support of the community that it serves.
“We once again ask the community of Bedfordview to help sponsor us on a monthly basis. You will be given a section 18a certificate to deduct the amount you contribute from your taxable income,” said Mr Henry.
He said the forum plans to implement a new telephone system, which will record all calls to the sector vehicles as well as forward any unanswered calls to the management of Bedfordview Police Station.
“We believe this will bring accountability to the system and improve the relationship between the SAPS and the community,” he said.
Mr Henry said the BCPF is also looking into installing license plate recognition cameras on the main roads in the area.
After installation, the cameras will pick up known suspicious number plates and notify the police and local security companies of their presence in the suburb.
“We also hope to raise awareness of driveway robberies and home invasions, and subsequently combat this violation of our peaceful suburb,” said Mr Henry.
He said the BCPF would like to increase the number of patrollers on its books.
“These are the men and women who care for us and give of their time to be the eyes and ears of the police,” he said.
He said the forum has a wish to acquire a dedicated response vehicle for both patrolling and medical response in the area.
“This vehicle will be on the roads of Bedfordview, in close co-operation with both the SAPS and EMPD, keeping a lookout for suspicious activity and ready to react should there be a medical emergency in our area,” said Mr Henry.

An estimated 40.3 million people around the world live in slavery involving either sexual exploitation or forced labor. A new partnership with Freedom United is giving Rotarians a chance to do something to stop it.

Dave McCleary was volunteering at a youth conference in 2012 when a young woman named Melissa explained how she had ended up in the sex trade.
She was living in a nice suburb of Atlanta, Georgia, USA, when a young man knocked on her door and offered her a job as a model. The man turned out to be a pimp, who lured her into prostitution through a combination of drugs, threats, and coercion.
“She was from my town, and was living in an apartment where my wife used to live before we got married,” remembers McCleary, a member of the Rotary Club of Roswell. “After the presentation, a member of my club gave her a big hug. I asked how he knew her, and he said she used to babysit his kids when she was 12. That’s when I realized this wasn’t someone else’s problem. This is happening all around us.”
McCleary is now co-chair of the Rotarian Action Group Against Slavery, which has been coordinating Rotary clubs’ efforts to fight slavery since 2013. A big challenge for the group has been motivating clubs to act. The immense scale of the problem can be daunting. 
The Global Slavery Index estimates that, worldwide, 40.3 million people are subject to some form of slavery: bonded labor, forced labor, child slavery, sex trafficking, or forced marriage. 
“I think many people ask, ‘What can I do? What impact can my small club possibly have?’” McCleary says.
One answer could come from the group’s recent partnership with Freedom United, a nonprofit organization that has mobilized millions of partners, activists, and advocates through online campaigns to convince governments and companies to end slavery. 
Freedom United Executive Director Joanna Ewart-James and Advocacy Assistant Miriam Karmali hand out fliers at a flower show being held in London discussing the link between modern slavery and the sponsor of the flower show.
Through Freedom United’s website, Rotary clubs of any size can sign up to form “freedom rings,” which raise community awareness of slavery while sharing information with one another through an online platform. Freedom United helps the club plan a two-hour community event by arranging speakers that can include experts, survivors, and representatives of local nonprofits that are already fighting modern slavery. At the end of the event, people are invited to join the ring. The core team this creates then selects yearly projects to commit to.
“These rings are inspired out of a Rotary club but also pull from the larger community,” says Joe Schmidt, CEO of Freedom United. “We have a series of things they can choose to do. We ask them to keep it pretty simple and laser-focused on one particular project.” 
Schmidt, who advises Delta Airlines on its anti-trafficking strategy, met McCleary through Delta’s involvement with Georgia Rotarians, including during the 2017 Rotary Convention in Atlanta.
“Dave and I started to talk, and we recognized that there are maybe 200 to 400 groups just in the U.S. working on modern slavery topics. However, they are all disjointed with no common platform,” Schmidt says. “It sparked in us a connection between Freedom United’s interest in taking our massive online community down to the grassroots level and Rotary’s ability to provide hundreds of groups all over the world who would be foot soldiers in this fight.”
According to Schmidt, a ring in Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA, is planning an annual gala fundraiser, and one in Raleigh, North Carolina, is working on a walk/run to raise awareness. Another ring is organizing a “red sand project,” where volunteers sprinkle red sand in the cracks of city streets to represent all the people in the world who are enslaved. 
Ian Rumbles, president-elect of the Rotary Club of Clayton, North Carolina, heard Schmidt speak at his district conference in April. His club is in the beginning stages of forming a ring.
“What resonated with me was hearing about the amount of domestic slavery and the number of people forced to work in farm fields in my own state,” says Rumbles. “The fact that people in our country were modern slaves made me think that I can only imagine the amount of slavery around the world.”
Schmidt says Rotary’s experience with polio eradication makes it a perfect partner for this fight.
“Rotary’s patience in committing to a cause and its track record with polio have shown that Rotarians are willing to take mature, committed action toward long-term global change, even if it doesn’t give immediate gratifying results,” he says. “That’s the thing missing in the fight against modern slavery: large organizations who are willing to step into this thing for the long haul and eradicate slavery once and for all.”
Rotary clubs have been supporting anti-slavery organizations for over a decade. In one of the larger efforts, 14 Rotary clubs led by the Rotary Club of Dunbar, Lothian, Scotland, opened a vocational training center for trafficking survivors in Kalimpong, India, in 2015. The project was funded in part by a Rotary Foundation grant. The group plans to add  a home for women and girls freed from slavery. 
McCleary is hoping that the partnership with Freedom United will better lead to more. 
“The great thing about Rotary is that even though we are international, we are community-based,” he adds. “So if there’s a need in a community, we have Rotary clubs there to make it happen.”

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