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 28 October 2019

The Quiz, James goes to Baragwanath, Die Boere Gemeenskap, Transvaal and a Book Drive in Barbados.

Last Week
It was a Business Meeting but I wasn't there.
it was also our Quiz in aid of PolioPlus and here's a report from David Bradshaw:


It was a great evening, the room was packed with 80 participants.
Quiz Master Larry Benjamin of Quizwizz Productions ran a fun and dynamic Quiz evening.The Quiz included colour picture quiz rounds,a music round,general knowledge and trivia or speed quiz round.

13 teams took part(14th team paid but did not make it) and the three top teams were :-
  1. Parkview Birdies(Ladies from the Golf Club).
Conundrums(this team included Sybille & Pam). Joint second with

       Hagis Chapels(Fourways Main Reef).


Monies are still coming in but we estimate at least R16K will have been raised for Polio Plus.

A  Raffle with some really wonderful prizes helped us exceed our target of R10K.
There was a real Buzz all night  and everyone had a great time.

Out of interest the breakdown of attendees were as follows:-
Rosebank Rotarians 11
Other Rotarians.       10
Anns.                             2
Non Rotarians.           57


Total.                           80


And a big thank you to the organising team, President Jean, Pam Donaldson, Sonja Hood, Sybille Essman ( who conceived at and put it all together) and David Bradshaw.

As President Jean said in her column,



James Croswell represented our Club at the graduation of spiritual counsellors at Baragwanath, where he met and made some very important contacts in Government. This project is ticking along well and again – a job well done by RC Rosebank.






This Week
We have a speaker, I imagine the chairman Leon Cronje, of the Boere Gemeenskap Transvaal, an organisation that supports people in informal settlements.  The original date for them coming to address us was cancelled at the last minute but my original comments bare repeating.

Nowhere on its website does the organisation mention that it only assists whites, presumably Afrikaans speaking whites but that is the impression that I have from the photographs.

Personally I have a problem with this which is exemplified by Transvaal in the name of an organisation that was only founded four years ago, 20 years after the province of that name ceased to exist.
Don't misunderstand me.  I am not saying that these unfortunate people shouldn't be helped. I know that there are approximately 56 informal settlements between the East Rand and Pretoria that house predominantly white people. I am just concerned that there could be an isolationist agenda.  I hope I am proved wrong.

Collections at Spar Norwood
Don't forget this weekend and if there is anyone else who can help please speak to Costa Qually.

What’s a library without books? An empty room — until members of the Rotaract Club of Barbados get involved, that is.

In 2018, the Rotaractors learned that the library at Luther Thorne Memorial Primary School, which was next door to the space in Bridgetown where the club met at the time, had no books at all. The club launched its Once Upon a Time project to replenish the library with books and to raise awareness of the importance of literacy. “We wanted to show kids the practical aspects of literacy in the real world,” says club member Mario Boyce.
The club’s goal was to collect 150 to 200 books appropriate for children ages five to 11. With the support of the school’s administration, teachers, and local businesses, the club far exceeded that goal, collecting more than 1,100 books. Of those, 925 went into the Thorne library, some excess books the library couldn’t take were donated to another primary school, and some books for more mature readers were donated to a shelter for abused women. “Even after we closed the drive, people were still giving us books, which was fantastic,” says Boyce.
The CEOs of a local bank and of a radio station, both of whom are Rotarians, supported the effort. The bank and other businesses served as drop-off locations for books, and the radio station recorded and regularly aired a jingle publicizing the book drive.
The club also held a spelling bee, one round of which was a Jeopardy!-style quiz that included a category about Rotary and Rotaract. “We wanted to educate people about Rotaract and Interact,” Boyce says. The spelling bee was not initially part of the project but was added to engage students and to emphasize the benefits of literacy. “We were flexible enough to modify our original plan,” he adds.
The project, which won a Rotaract Outstanding Project Award, will continue in the coming year, as the club members paint the library and furnish it with shelving.
In Barbados, difficult economic conditions mean that many families have trouble making ends meet. The Rotaractors also plan to provide two students with everything they need for the school year, including uniforms, shoes, books, and food for breakfast and lunch. “This is not only going to help the children; it’s going to help the parents and relieve them of some of their stress,” Boyce says.
“Our theme is to go the extra mile this year,” he says. “We want to do it with more impactful projects.”— Annemarie Mannion

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