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, 17 July 2017

Major Tom.....oops Tim, Annette Jahnel & the best comments I have read on Rotary Projects for a long time.

Last Week
I had .....and still have...flu so I was unable to attend the meeting.  One advantage is that I can write the Ramble in bed.  This has made me think about the future of Rotary and the eClub, at least, could have an in bed meeting. It's a thought.

Tim Truluck flanked by James Croswell & Obakeng Moloko
Many thanks to Lyn who sent me a report plus pics of last Friday's meeting.  Here is what she had to say:

Tim Truluck, the current Councillor for  Rosebank gave an interesting and informative talk to the Club last Friday.
He told of some of the challenges  of an almost overnight transition from opposition to being the majority in the Council.
He advised members on how to log water and electricity faults with the Council.
He also suggested that people log on to Twitter, as this is one of the  the best ways of communicating with the Council re faults.
 
Mike Lamb presented a banner from the Rotary Club of Schaffhausen in Switzerland.

He entertained us with some of the background to the banner.


This Week
Our speaker is another motivational speaker, Annette Jahnel.  I doubt whether flu will allow me not to be motivated again  The puffing below will show you what I mean.  A quick dip into Plato's Republic would be a good antidote. 
Annette is a new age nomad, a pusher of boundaries, a catalyst, a destroyer of boxes, a peaceful anarchist and a questioner of every thing. Annette would like live in a world where borders and boundaries were only figments of the imagination, language was a universal think tank and shiny small things were exciting only to magpies. Annette would like to live in a world where the mind advanced faster than the computer and the only thing that governed us was our own self-control. Annette does not care for fashion or shoes she does not know the latest fancy restaurants or hip words, although she knows a lot of words and uses them in a variety of interesting and exciting ways. Annette doesn’t believe that all is right with the world. Or that technology is the answer to everything. Annette thinks bunny huggers are as dangerous as dolphin hunters and that the only way forward is to evolve and the only way to evolve is to pay as much attention to our brains as we do to our biceps. She believes human evolution can only take place in the human mind and that humans should pay more attention to thinking than shopping. Annette thinks, a good think is a great way to pass the time and that having a truly original thought is as good as it gets. When she leaves people happier and more inspired than when she found them she believes she has done well. Annette sees rainbows in dews drops and value in a carpenters hand made chair but none in a banker’s lair. She knows to step lightly in deserts and other people’s lives and beliefs. She knows she knows nothing and is quite happy to admit it, having discovered that it is the best way to learn something new everyday. And despite not having many pairs of shoes or in fact much stuff at all she doesn’t feel in the least deprived as she believes the pursuit of wisdom is far more exciting than the pursuit of stuff. Join her on a little trip around the planet and experience the world through her eyes because above all, Annette sees thing differently.



Rotary member and author Marilyn Fitzgerald stresses the importance of community involvement for sustainable service projects.

Rotary members, volunteers, and donors are usually excited to talk about successful projects. Marilyn Fitzgerald, a member of the Rotary Club of Traverse City, Michigan, USA, draws inspiration from a far less popular topic: failure.
A clinical psychologist and author, Fitzgerald has spent years studying economic development projects in poor countries, where well-intentioned efforts to improve lives sometimes backfire. Now she travels the world to consult on projects and speak to Rotary clubs about sustainability and lessons from her fieldwork. We caught up with her at One Rotary Center, where she had addressed Rotary staff.

Q: How did you come to focus on sustainability in projects?
A: Looking back on international projects I’ve been involved with, I realized that they often created a dependency on the Rotarians, outsiders coming into a community with money and good intentions. I asked myself why projects no longer existed, why the people we wanted to help weren’t carrying on like we planned. I started to realize that those people were not included in project planning, and that’s not sustainable.
What does it take for people to sustain a project themselves, and go on without our help? It’s about getting away from the charity model, where we give things away, and getting into the opportunity model, where we empower people to carve their own paths out of poverty.
Q: How does that work?
A: I work with microloan programs that provide entrepreneurs with capital to start or invest in a business, and the programs I work with always incorporate an educational component. People sometimes don’t know how to count or even the cost of the goods they’re selling. They can get themselves into terrible financial trouble.
It’s amazing to watch in the field: You teach financial literacy, and the people that will listen and learn are the youth and the mothers and grandmothers, the core of the community. In the past we’ve given loans mostly to men and learned when we give a loan to a man, he gets some money, develops a business, and often leaves his family. Women tend to take better care of the money and share their skills with the community.
Q: How do we define sustainability with respect to humanitarian work? 
A: There are two main areas of humanitarian aid. One is relief aid, and we don’t expect for that to be sustainable; we expect to take people out of dire straits and help them get back on their feet. Development aid has to do with people being able to do something for themselves, so they’re not dependent on us. It’s a simple litmus test: What will happen to these people if you walk away today?
I was involved in a scholarship program in Indonesia where I was raising $72,000 a year for 1,200 kids to go to school. I didn’t think too much about what would happen if I didn’t show up [with the money] one year, because I planned to keep showing up. You know who thought about it? 
The mothers and the children — every year they worried if I was going to be there or not. That wasn’t a sustainable source of income for tuition and we had to change our approach. Income from livestock eventually helped that community become more self-sufficient.
Q: What steps can Rotary clubs take to make their projects more sustainable?
A: The first step is to involve the community you want to help; talk to the people who live there about their priorities.
In Guatemala, I worked with women who lived and worked on a city dump. A group of Rotarians came in with the goal of providing shelter for these women and their children. But the houses they built were four miles from the dump, and it wasn’t practical for the women to stay there during the workweek.
One woman later told me she had never asked for a house, that she was used to living outside, and what she really wanted was an education for her children. Do you know how much cheaper that would have been than building houses?
As Westerners, we often think we know the answers, we know people need clean water. What we forget to ask is whether they think they need clean water. Does what you’re offering matter to them? If not, you have to go back to the drawing board and come up with something that will matter.

Monday, 10 July 2017

The DG's Visit, a Councillor calls, and Telemedicine in Rural Nigeria.

Last Week
Isn't it fantastic when the DG's visit comes so early in the Rotary Year and you can do a really good PR job on what the club intends doing and then he goes away and hasn't a clue whether you ever do anything at all.  DG Jankees Slicher was his usual jovial self and presented President Lyn Collocott with his banner for the year.

This Week


We have Cllr Tim Truluck talking about municipal things.  There's quite a difference between being in opposition and being in control of Johannesburg. It will be interesting to hear what he has to say.
He is President Lyn's councillor and I am sure she has a list of things she wants him to sort out.
If anyone else has complaints about their area now is the  time to air them.




Rotary Leadership Institute
President Lyn mentioned last week that I was the regional representative for RLI in Region 2 and I have already been asked to speak to a couple of clubs in the region.  I became involved purely because you had asked me to be President Elect and I thought I needed to be up-to-date with what has happening in Rotary because it is so easy to rest on your laurels within the organisation.  I then just stuck with it as I felt it was a very valuable experience and the discussions were great.
We are working on a short version of the first programme which could be used within the Rotary Club as an introduction to Rotary at the 'Fireside/Poolside Chat'...whatever.

Bophelo Palliative Care Project
The final report is now on the page with the link at the top.  It was only completed this week and has pictures.  It has already appeared on Facebook.

Anns Visit to Ikageng
Just click on the Anns' Page


Technology allows Virtual Doctor Appointments in Rural Nigeria (something that could work here!)

On a visit to southern Nigeria last October, Dr. James K. Gude of Sebastopol, Calif., and Mikel Cook of the Rotary Club of Sebastopol Sunrise learned how hard it can be to bring medical care to rural areas.
“We drove 20 or 30 miles from the Federal Medical Centre of Yenagoa to a satellite hospital, and it took an hour,” recalls Gude, an honorary Rotarian who is medical director of Sebastopol-based telemedicine services company OffSiteCare. “Big chunks of the road were flooded, and there were people all over the place; we were going through villages and trying not to hit anybody.”
 That laborious journey illustrated the reason for their visit – to help make health care available to people in isolated areas. In rural portions of Nigeria, a country with only one physician for every 2,500 people, many Nigerians seeking health services have to make trips much more arduous than the drive Cook and Gude undertook. The result, of course, is that a great many people simply don’t receive care. While it would be ideal to get more doctors in remote regions, that would take years.
Gude and the Sebastopol Sunrise Rotarians are part of a larger effort to bring technology to bear on the problem, using telemedicine – the use of information technology to provide health care from a distance – to bring doctors to patients virtually. And thanks to a global grant from The Rotary Foundation, a team of health care professionals from Nigeria has been trained in telemedicine.
The team observes a demonstration of a telemedicine robot; Mikel Cook (from left), Hussain, Obikeze, Kemelagha, and Dr. James K. Gude.
Telemedicine has been around for many years, but only as internet speeds have gotten faster has it become practical. Telemedicine allows physicians to connect with patients remotely, as well as to consult with colleagues all over the world. At its simplest, it consists of a chat via online video, but it can also allow a physician to examine a patient remotely using a robot.
The Sebastopol Sunrise Rotarians have been involved with telemedicine since 2012, when then-President Gail Thomas (a former senior official in the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare) proposed it as a club priority. 
“We decided that we wanted to make a long-term commitment to telemedicine because it guides treatment and it saves lives,” says Cook, a computer consultant. “It counters the global tendency for physicians to concentrate in big cities, leaving the countryside without easy access.”
Since then, the club has worked with other Rotarians and with Gude to bring telemedicine technology and training to several hospitals around the world, including facilities in Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Zimbabwe. 
Participating hospitals can use their telemedicine capabilities to consult with Gude and his medical colleagues on particularly difficult cases. For example, a patient in Congo avoided an unnecessary procedure to remove his spleen, thanks to his physician’s ability to tele-consult with Gude and his network.
Along the way, Thomas and Cook helped found a nonprofit, Global OffSite Care, devoted to bringing Rotarian resources together in support of telemedicine projects worldwide. Gude, whose company provides telemedicine services to several hospitals in Northern California, has been an enthusiastic and knowledgeable volunteer. 
The Nigeria connection began in 2013, when Princess Frances Kemelagha, a psychiatrist at the Federal Medical Centre in Yenagoa and a member of the Rotary Club of Yenagoa, learned about Global OffSite Care at the Rotary International Convention in Lisbon and was instantly captivated. 
The medical professionals from Nigeria (clockwise from top left: Sheriff Hussain, Dr. Obioma Obikeze, Dr. Finomo Finomo, Dr. Dennis Allagoa, Princess Frances Kemelagha, and Adeolu Tella) visit Sebastopol, Calif., for telemedicine training.
So it was that in August and September 2015 – thanks to a global grant and the efforts of Rotarians from Sebastopol, Rancho Cotati, and Santa Rosa East, plus the Sonoma State University Rotaract Club and others – she and five colleagues flew to Northern California for 11 days of training under Gude in telemedicine best practices.
Since then, Kemelagha says, she has seen the training’s effects in better outcomes for both patients and doctors. Thanks to telemedicine, a 75-year-old patient from a remote village was found in need of a potentially lifesaving pacemaker. The colleague consultations via telemedicine are having other unexpected benefits. “Our resident doctors are learning so much more that they are beginning to pass their exams with ease,” she notes.
During a follow-up visit to the Federal Medical Centre last October, Cook and Gude found the Nigerian team making good use of their new telemedicine capabilities. Those include a donated InTouch Health robot, a device that allows the remote physician to see and examine the patient and even hear the sound transmitted from a stethoscope to aid in making a diagnosis. 
“The need for telemedicine can never be overemphasized,” says Kemelagha. “Health care should be for everyone – for the underprivileged, for the underserved, for the remote areas – not just for the rich.” 

Tuesday, 4 July 2017

Lyn's Induction Dinner, the DG's Visit, Region 2 Dinner & New Zealand Rotarians help Leprosy Sufferers in Tanzania.

Liz Short (R) hands over to Shirley Eustace as Ann Presiden
Lyn Collocott's Induction Dinner







It's best said in pictures...the food was great as was the company.  We all had a great time.










Certificates of Appreciation to James Croswell, Mark Franklin & Neville Howes for their work on the Bophelo Baragwanath Palliative Care Project.  Marianne Soal was not present to receive her certificate.



Certificates of Appreciation to Lyn Collocott & Joan Sainsbury for their work for the Rotary Arts Festival










After all those jokes about 30 years of 100% Attendance at Discon, Ken Stonestreet received a certificate for 40 years!


Moira Katz


Dr Mark Potterton
Dr Pierre Vercueil














 Paul Harris Fellowships were granted to Dr Pierre Vercueil for his pro bono work as an ophthalmic surgeon with a special mention of surgery he has done on behalf of Rosebank Rotary Club.

To Dr Mark Potterton, principal of Holy Family College, Parktown for his services to education and specifically for his hosting, helping and assisting with our Rotary Careers Day for the past 3 years.

To Moira Katz, CEO of the SA National Children's Theatre  for the work she has done bringing live theatre to thousands of children, both rural and urban, throughout South Africa.


Peter James-Smith inducts Lyn Collocott as President of the Rotary Club of Rosebank Johannesburg 2017-18













DG Jankees Sligcher presents PJS with a certificate for the best weekly newsletter in District 9400 2016-17











President Bongani Sakhile Lunga of Highlands North Interact Club with supporters including Cesare & Donny Vidulich
The Club Board for 2017-18


































This Week
It's the DG's visit and he will be having lunch with us before meeting the eClub.  We seem to be having DG Jankees Sligcher once a week at the moment and then he will probably vanish for the rest of the year.


Region 2 Dinner Friday 21st July

Our region stretches from Northcliffe through town to Sandton and Randburg so it is quite a few clubs.

The Dinner will be at the Lifestyle Centre in the Douglasdale Retirement Home, 28 Galloway Ave, Bryanston.
6:30 for 7:00pm
Cost R210 pp (bring your own wine or spirits.)
Dress Code Smart Casual

Some of us may like to attend this as GTC were strong supporters of the Rotary Arts Festival.  

I gather that there was a previous concert which I didn't know about.

Don't forget to take along your penny whistle or whatever your instrument is so that you can join in.  
I used  to be a very bad 4th 'cellist and learnt very quickly that as long as you move your bow with everyone else and don't press too hard nobody will notice. 





Cared for with love 

With the support of a group of New Zealand Rotarians, leprosy victims and their families in Tanzania are receiving the care they deserve.



Head of Ritaliza Secondary School, Sister Mary Masway, and Sister in Charge Upendo Rehabilitation Home, Sister Maryagatha Massae. 
When PDG Stuart Batty and the late John Somerville travelled to Tanzania in 2001, their journey took them to the Upendo Rehabilitation Home for Leprosy Sufferers in Maji ya Chai. The centre was home to 150 men, women and children, including widows of leprosy victims and families where both parents suffered the debilitating, though curable, condition. 
The Rotary Club of Arusha, Tanzania, established the home in 1995, providing accommodation for leprosy sufferers and their families. Prior to this, victims had been forced to scrape together a living on the streets and take up residence on a nearby riverbank. Upendo, which means “cared for with love”, improved their welfare considerably, though improvements were necessary to make facilities and resources accessible. 
John and Stuart asked how New Zealand Rotarians could assist the effort. The suggestion of helping the children of Upendo led to the launch of Project CHEF, an acronym for Clothe, House, Educate and Feed. Since then, many children have been assisted by the effort, such as Monica Maiko, who has been supported by the Rotary Club of East Coast Bays, NZ, since she was a baby, with the nickname “Happy”. 
Rotary oversaw the transference of Upendo’s management to the Missionary Sisters of the Precious Blood in 2003, who specialise in the care of the sick. Previously, the sisters would bicycle up the long and dusty road to Upendo each week to tend to the foot and leg sores of those with leprosy. Rotary’s offer to the sisters to take up residence at Upendo was happily accepted. In the years since, they have greatly improved living conditions and provision of health care services and hygiene education. The sisters, with Rotary’s support, further prepare the children for formal schooling and encourage residents to realise their potential, despite their circumstances. 
Thankfully, leprosy rates in the area have declined in the decades since Upendo’s establishment, with the facility instrumental in reducing incidence and spread. Today, Upendo has branched out to care for the poorest of the poor, as well as leprosy sufferers.
Monica is currently attending St Ritaliza Secondary School, a boarding school close to the Kenyan border. Stuart recently returned to Tanzania and was delighted to meet Monica, accompanied by Head Sister Agatha of Upendo. “New Zealand Rotarians can be proud of their contribution to helping children like Monica on their way to a now bright future,” Stuart said. C

Monday, 26 June 2017

Discon, the Induction Dinner and a Rotary Refugee Initiative in Wales

Discon
It was a really enjoyable conference this year probably because it was smaller, all the regulars were there so it was easier to spot them and it just seemed more relaxed.  Congratulations to the organising committee.
At the International Evening on the Friday Night

I am not going to put lots of pictures of Discon on The Ramble because you will see hundreds of them on the District Website and also in the DG's Newsletter but you will see us!








Patrick Ache won a prize for Best Dressed Man.  I don't know what is in the parcel!  It must have taken him hours to do all that embroidery!












Kevin Wolhuter danced the night away at the Gala Banquet on the Saturday evening.




The rest of us just looked smart.

This Week
It's Lyn Collocott's Induction as President on Friday evening so obviously there is no Friday lunchtime meeting.  There was a request for 'vegetables' to go with the dishes.  It was decided at Discon that we would bring our own just in case and we also decided which ones we would each bring.  I opted for potatoes and for health reasons all our vegetables will be raw.

Sadly my first Rotary Club in Johannesburg, the Rotary Club of Parktown Excalibur, is closing down on Friday night with what they are calling 'The Last Supper' at the same venue as our Induction Dinner but obviously not in the same room.  Don't be confused on the night!

When I have a chance I am going to pop in and say hello....maybe a couple of them may join us.


Statistics
As we are coming up to the end of the Rotary Year I thought you might be interested in the statistics for The Ramble this month bearing in mind that we have a week to go and there was no Ramble last week.

Here are the number of pageviews per country:

Entry Pageviews


South Africa             455
United States            120
Germany                     29
Chile                          19
United Kingdom        18
France                         12
Ukraine                       11
Ireland                         10
Russia                           9
Poland                           6

There have been a total of 57 522 pageviews in all.

Rotary Club of Cardiff Bay, Wales

Alison Sutherland
If I report a crime, can the police officer deport me? When I get a cold, should I go to the hospital? Is it all right to spit in the street? For many refugees in a new country, the answers to those and many other questions aren’t obvious.



Abbie Tr
That’s why Alison Sutherland has been helping asylum seekers learn the customs of their new nation. “We want to set them up for integration rather than isolation,” Sutherland says. 
Wales is home to several thousand displaced people from Eritrea, Libya, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Uganda, and other countries. Upon seeking asylum, they must wait as long as a year for a hearing to determine if they qualify for official refugee status. 
Life during that time is extremely frustrating for them, Sutherland says: “They’re not allowed to work. Meanwhile, of course, they are very afraid. Their journeys have been horrendous.” 
Sutherland, assisted by two members of the City of Cardiff Rotaract Club, regularly meets with asylum seekers to discuss topics such as the role of women in Welsh society, the justice system, and local customs.
 “Some of them have started volunteering with Rotary and Rotaract also,” she says. “They’ve helped us with street cleaning, blood pressure events, face painting, tree planting. They say that we’ve given them welcome and respect.”

Monday, 12 June 2017

Louis Nigrini, the Arts Festival comes to an end and $450 million more to the Rotary Polio Plus Programme

Last Week
Our guest speaker, Louis Nigrini, really made us think about why we were sitting there and what we do.  It really made me wonder about The Ramble and if it was really the answer!  I spoke to him afterwards and asked him for the answers but there aren't any.  He said he was there to ask questions.
The example he gave of volunteers to New Orleans giving $250 service yet costing $1 000 to do that is certainly not equivalent to the time we give.  For example, mentoring a student cost the mentor time but that is all and I really do not think that Firlands Fete loses money because we run the bookstall!
Still it was an interesting series of questions and volunteer stereotypes.

Eric Hackett
Esther Okehi
It was a very depleted meeting because of the Rotary Arts Festival but we do keep up our reputation as a club that always seems to have visitors.  We were delighted to welcome Esther Okehi from Texas and Eric Hackett from the Rotary Club of Bedfordview.  He was seen chatting to the speaker subsequently, obviously feeling that he should give
Bedfordview a blast too!

Sunday 

It was the close of the Rotary Arts Festival which has been a resounding success.  Here are the deskwallers at the end.
Mark Franklin, Jean Bernardo, Thembi Ndlovu, Lyn Collocott and Neville Howes
This Week.
We will be celebrating our Eternal Youth on Youth Day so t here will be no Ramble next week so after Discon will be the next one.

ATLANTA, Ga. (June 12, 2017) – Today in Atlanta Rotary President John Germ and Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, announced a commitment of up to $450 million to support the eradication of polio.

To an audience of nearly 40,000 Rotary members attending the humanitarian organization’s annual convention, Rotary and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation renewed their longstanding support for ending polio – a paralyzing, life-altering scourge on the verge of becoming the second human disease ever to be eliminated. Rotary committed to raise $50 million per year over the next three years, with every dollar to be matched with two additional dollars from the Gates Foundation. This expanded agreement will translate into $450 million for polio eradication activities, including immunization and surveillance over the next three years. This critical funding helps ensure countries around the world remain polio-free and that polio is ended in the remaining three endemic countries: Afghanistan, Nigeria, and Pakistan.
“In 2016, fewer children were paralyzed by polio than ever before, thanks to the dedication of Rotary members and our partners,” said Germ. “The paralysis of even one child by a preventable disease is unacceptable, and I'm proud to see our members redoubling their commitment to ensure we reach every single child with the polio vaccine.”
In a partnership spanning a decade, Rotary and the Gates Foundation, along with the other Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) partners, have led the effort to end polio worldwide. This funding extension reaffirms a commitment established at the 2013 Rotary Convention in Lisbon, Portugal, when the Gates Foundation pledged to match Rotary contributions two-to-one, up to $35 million per year through 2018. Rotary, including matching funds from the Gates Foundation, has donated more than $1.6 billion to polio eradication. 
“The vision of eradicating polio began with Rotary, and its support of that effort has been unwavering for more than 35 years,” said Gates. “Rotary’s commitment to raise $150 million over the next three years to end polio forever is a testament to the compassion, generosity, and kindness of more than a million Rotarians around the world.”
Today’s announcement comes on the heels of the news that world governments and other donors have pledged to contribute US$1.2 billion total to the GPEI for polio eradication efforts. The government funding—also announced today at the Rotary Convention—will substantially help to close the US$1.5 billion funding gap, allowing partners to immunize 450 million children every year and support rigorous disease surveillance in both endemic and at-risk polio-free countries. While the government funding announced today makes considerable headway in the fight to end polio, continued support from donors remains vital to achieve a polio-free world.
The global eradication of polio has been Rotary’s top priority since 1985. Through the Global Polio Eradication Initiative – a public-private partnership that includes Rotary, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, and UNICEF – the incidence of polio has plummeted by more than 99.9 percent, from about 350,000 cases a year at the start of the initiative to just 37 cases in 2016.

Monday, 5 June 2017

RLI, Rotary Arts Festival, Frank Taylor, Louis Nigrini & Rotary Convention 1917.


Last Week


I was on the Rotary Leadership Institute Course last Friday so I can't comment on the meeting though I can show you some of the people attending the various courses on the Saturday.

It was also the week of the start of the Rotary Arts Festival so let's just have a number of photographs.  On our Facebook Page I will put a slide show of lots of them so click on https://www.facebook.com/rosebankrotary/?ref=bookmarks






We presented Nombulelo Yena and Michelle Brook of Omnicom with Certificates of  Merit for all their help.

 Frank Taylor
Frank is a member of the Rotary Club of Hatfield, our major partners in the Baragwanath Palliative Care Project and who approached us in the first place.





At the recent District Conference in the UK Frank Taylor received A Citation for Meritorious Service from Rotary International.
This is a rare event, not being a District award, or even a RIBI award, but one from “head office”, i.e. received out of the 1.2m Rotarians…

Many congratulations to Frank, being seen here with The Rotary International Representative Sean Doyle. 







This Week
Our Speaker is Louis Nigrini, a motivational speaker...hence the joke about motivational speakers.  He is going to talk to us about Volunteerism.



Public Speaking is not for the faint hearted. It takes a good mix of skill, courage and sheer stupidity to get on a stage and tell people all about your greatest moments of joy, pain and sometimes embarrassment. Louis Nigrini is a uniquely talented and budding speaker who has won the Afrikaans, Humourist, Impromptu Speaking and Evaluator’s categories in the Toastmasters Speaking competitions in Southern Africa. 
He has spoken at ministry events, corporate functions, schools and community projects all over the country, performing in the capacity of Guest Speaker, Trainer or MC, before audiences ranging from 10’s to thousands. He is also an ATKV accredited judge for both Public Speaking and Debating and served as the chief judge in several School Public Speaking Competitions. 
With his background of full time Ministry, being a parent, stage performances, broadcast television and Corporate Communication, Louis is sculpting the art of inspirational storytelling…with a few stories of his own. With the unique brand of “coming of age stories” and tales that shaped his life, Louis has left many a crowd laughing…sometimes at themselves, but mostly at him. He has the ability to capture the crowd in a unique way and leave them with such a powerful message that they will still be pondering about in the days to come.
Louis and his wife also enjoy writing school shows and have seen these creations come to life on several school stages. He is the Production Manager at a video production company in Johannesburg focussing on career advice. He currently lives in Randburg with his wife, Pauli and their two little boys, Luan and Reinhardt.



If you are attending the 2017 Rotary International Convention from 10 to 14 June, you should take time to reflect on the historic convention of 1917, also in Atlanta. There, Arch Klumph gave a speech calling for an endowment, a key moment in the origin of The Rotary Foundation.


Most sessions of the 1917 convention were held atthe Baptist Tabernacle on Luckie Street. The building, now known simply as the Tabernacle, is just a few blocks from this year’s convention home, the Georgia World Congress Center, so stroll across Centennial Olympic Park to Luckie Street and imagine what the convention was like 100 years ago.
Some of the speakers covered topics that were very much of the moment in 1917 (“The Creation of Public Sentiment to Demand and Construct Public Highways”) while others tackled subjects that would not be out of place today (“The Establishment of Vacant Lot Gardening”). There was a Special Assembly on the “Enlightenment of Non-Rotarians as to Rotary,” a subject of perennial concern.
Returning to Atlanta is an apt way to mark the centennial of The Rotary Foundation. It’s a powerful reminder of how far Rotary has come, and how important our core values and mission remain as we look to the next 100 years.