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 13 March 2017

The National Children's Theatre, Elephants and meet the incoming RI President

Last Week
Moira Katz is thanked for her talk by Philip Frankel
 Last week Moira Katz, the CEO of the National Children's Theatre, came to speak to us about the work of the theatre.  The amount of touring that they do to the rural areas was quite amazing and to think that Coriolanus was seen by 9 000 learners show the scope of their productions.

There were a couple of disquieting revelations.  It was suggested that we should have more learners attend our Careers Day and I said that 3 schools who said that they would attend just didn't turn up despite being phoned on numerous occasions.  Moira said that she had exactly the same problems with government schools, a complete lack of interest on the part of the teachers though obviously there are exceptions.

Secondly they had written and produced a play warning girls about 'Blessers' - usually middle aged married men who pick up young teenage girls, set them up and lavish money on them and  then eventually tire of them and kick them out.  Very often these girls are left with no money, no education and cut off from their families.  This was performed at a primary school in Soweto but when it was performed at a high school, not only were no teachers in evidence but it was practically impossible to produce it as the learners were so unruly and the boys thought that the middle aged men were incredibly clever and the girls wanted to be like the kept girls.

This Week
It's a complete change...elephants.  Our speaker is Rob Morley of SFM.
Rob is an ecologist and natural resource manager. His areas of experience include terrestrial carbon, biodiversity and conservation development, natural resource management, land-use management for conservation, environmental planning and resource based rural development. Rob joined SFM Africa as Projects Manager in 2007. Prior to joining SFM Rob worked in environmental and natural resource management in Southern Africa and was a National Park ecologist in Mozambique and PhD Researcher on elephants (Mozambique and South Africa).

Established in 2006, SFM Africa is dedicated to being Africa’s leading company in ethical and sustainable landscape conservation and development. SFM Africa, on a commercial basis, is incorporating emerging environmental markets through the development of environmental goods and services attributable to forest landscapes through a diverse portfolio and pipeline of projects in Africa, specifically in the Congo basin Forest and sub-tropical Miombo woodlands.  Here is the link to their website.

Meet RI President Elect, Ian Riseley.
Ian H.S. Riseley gets up from his desk, and he is tall. He has white hair, a firm handshake, and no tie. Early on, you sense that he likes the sort of energetic exchange that can swerve from serious to lighthearted, which makes him very good company. He exudes competence – which makes him seem like the right person to advise you on vexing tax issues. That’s good, because it’s what he has done for the last 40 years.
Riseley is a practicing accountant near Melbourne, Australia, and principal of Ian Riseley & Co., where he advises local and international businesses. He received Australia’s AusAID Peacebuilder Award in 2002 in recognition of his work in the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste. He also received the Order of Australia medal in 2006 for his service to the community.
A member of the Rotary Club of Sandringham since 1978, he has served RI as treasurer, director, trustee, RI Board Executive Committee member, task force member, committee member and chair, and district governor. He received The Rotary Foundation’s Regional Service Award for a Polio-free World and its Distinguished Service Award.
His wife, Juliet, is also a Rotarian (but not in the same club) and is a past district governor. The Riseleys are multiple Paul Harris Fellows, Major Donors, and Bequest Society members.
Editor in Chief John Rezek met with Riseley at his office in Rotary’s Evanston, Ill., headquarters. 
Q: How did you hear about Rotary and when did you become a member?
A: A couple of years after I launched my accounting practice, my most significant client was a private hospital close to my office. The CEO was a Rotarian, and they must have been desperate because one day they invited me to a lunchtime meeting to speak about the fascinating topic of current developments in income tax. Yes, they more or less stayed awake. A few weeks later, the same client got in touch with me and said they were chartering a new club nearby and I said, “What does chartering mean?” (That tells us how often we lapse into Rotary-speak.) He said they were starting a new club in Sandringham and asked if I would be interested in going to the initial meeting. I said, “Absolutely.” But I didn’t go, which was foolish. I did go to the second meeting and met the 20 or so people who had been at the first meeting. They were the business elite of Sandringham, and I thought, wow, this is quite a group. So I kept going and we chartered – which means, by the way, we started the club – in November 1978.
Q: Was Rotary a good fit for you right away or did it take you time to become comfortable? 
A: I feel almost embarrassed saying this, but I felt comfortable immediately. It says something about the nature of the charter members of our club. We are talking about people who run extremely successful companies, but they were all really nice, absolutely first-rate individuals, and I wasn’t made to feel like the proprietor of a two-bit accounting practice down the road. That’s one of the delights of our organization globally – we’re all equals. I think that’s really important.
Q: Are most of your friends Rotarians?
A: My friends within Rotary aren’t just from my club. They are also from other clubs in the district. That’s one of the principal reasons I think people should be Rotarians – you make really good friends. My closest circle of friends are not all from the ranks of Rotary. But reflecting on it, a lot of them have become Rotarians and I don’t think they would have if I hadn’t been involved. The danger is that Rotary can take over your life. You can become excessively focused on Rotary. Our daughter, who has a degree in public relations and understands these things better than most, once described it as “Rotarama.” Rotary has basically taken over our lives. We put other things on the back burner; my golf handicap is disappearing into the distance, which is really sad. On the other hand, being in Rotary is a thrill and a privilege.
 Q: What moment made you see the importance of your involvement in Rotary?
A: I was the third president of our club at age 34. I went to PETS [presidents-elect training], which was held in a huge auditorium. I walked in, sat down, looked over my shoulder, and there was the senior partner of the accounting firm that I had previously worked for. John Hepworth was renowned among Australian accountants and was there as the incoming president of the Rotary Club of Melbourne, Australia’s first club, which started in 1921. Many of the movers and shakers in the city of Melbourne are in the Rotary Club of Melbourne. And there I was, the incoming president of the Rotary Club of Sandringham with 35 members, and we’re on a par. 
Q: If a young person asked you why he or she should join Rotary what, in order, would you say?
A: There are four elements. The first one is friendship. Rotary offers the opportunity to meet people in a semi-social environment and also achieve good things.
The second one is personal development. I became the third president of my club at a very young age as I was starting up my accounting practice. I didn’t enjoy speaking in public, but being involved in a Rotary club means that you’re encouraged – some would say forced – in a friendly environment to get experience speaking, running meetings, motivating people, all that sort of thing. Your Rotarian colleagues are not going to fault you for a simple mistake. So you get practice, you improve, and you do it better. I’m not quite as shy anymore, so that’s a significant benefit.
The third is business development. We’ve shied away from this over a period of time, and I don’t believe we should. When I was invited to join the Rotary Club of Sandringham, I told Juliet, “Well, they’ve invited me to join this group, what do you know about it?” She knew about the same as me, which was not a lot, but she made the point that we’d make new friends, and hopefully some of them wouldn’t be accountants because too many of our friends were accountants, as if that could possibly be true. Rotary is good for business. Why should we shy away from promoting this?
The fourth one, and by far the most important, is the chance to make a difference in the world. If someone asked me to eradicate polio, my ability to do this would be rather limited. But when you gather together with 1.2 million people of like mind and have people like Bill and Melinda Gates donate funds to help achieve this objective, the opportunity for success is far greater. 
Q: What has been your favorite job in Rotary? 
A: Bar none, it was acting as the president’s representative at a district conference. I loved that job. That’s why, when I allocate this responsibility on my behalf in 2017-18, I’ll make my selections for representatives very carefully. It’s a job that gives you the chance to go somewhere else in the world, or somewhere else in your own country, and understand how Rotary does all its great work. 
Q: As you prepare to assume the highest office in Rotary, is it hard to have a regular conversation with your fellow club members? 
A: Who in their right mind is going to say yes? [laughs] The answer is not at all. Maybe it’s because I’m Australian, and in Australia we have a really good technique for keeping people grounded. It’s called the “tall poppy syndrome.” If you get too big for your boots, my gosh, people bring you down to your rightful place in life very quickly. One of the absolute pleasures about the role that I now have is going around and meeting people and talking to them to ascertain what makes them tick. 
Q: What’s on your to-do list?
A: I have three words: planning, planning, and planning. This is a planning time, and I’m pleased to have the opportunity to think about ways in which I want to do things differently. In particular, I’m looking for ideas on how Rotary can relate better to young people. 
I want to get to know as many of the district governors-elect for 2017-18 as possible and establish lines of communication and understanding. I mean to tell them, “No pressure, but I’m relying on each and every one of you,” and they can rely on me too.
Q: What things are working well in Rotary and what things aren’t?
A: Well, the service we do for humanity, I think we do particularly well. Can we do better? Of course we can. Can we be better organized? Probably. Can we have a better relationship with the community at large? Yes, we probably can, but the actual service work that Rotary does is second to none, it’s wonderful. 
What else is good? Membership is growing in India, in Korea. In places where there’s a developing middle class, there’s a stampede to join Rotary. The corollary of that is that membership in places like the U.S., the UK, Australia, and New Zealand has fallen. We’re not attracting enough new members and we’re not retaining them. 
Our demographic is aging and that’s not good. We’re not reinventing our clubs, and that really needs to be at the forefront of our attention. Satellite clubs [a new type of affiliate club sponsored by a traditional club] provide an avenue to involve younger people who need more flexibility. Female Rotarians are making a real difference, and we need more of them. The best clubs are those that are close to their communities. 
Q: Do you have any specific suggestions for clubs? 
A: A review of the vocations of our membership is a good method to identify weaknesses and determine who to invite to join. Also I think we are missing a significant opportunity by not having more women in our clubs. There are some clubs, I’m ashamed to say, that don’t have any female members. We also need more women at the senior ranks of both the Trustees and the Board of Directors. 
Q: How could a club or district coax you to visit during your tenure?
A: Issue an invitation! I have made it a priority to visit parts of the Rotary world that seldom see the president or president-elect, and so far I have been to parts of Canada and the Caribbean that fit this description. My calendar fills quickly, but send me an invitation, and if it can happen, I’m pleased to come. 

Tuesday 7 March 2017

Bikanyo, Martin Mabula, Careers Day, National Childrens' Theatre and Sanitation Project in Ghana

Last Week
It was a busy week!  Marilyn Bassin came to talk to us about Boikanyo -the Dion Herson Foundation.  She showed us a lot of interesting pictures and is is really quite amazing what the Foundation achieves.
It was so refreshing to have someone come and talk to us about what was being achieved and not to ask us for money!
I enjoy watching Rotarians' eyes glaze over when that happens.



A Guitar for Martin Mabula
Martin Mabula & Richard Tonkin
It was a great evening at TJ Acoustic Club at Marks Park last Thursday evening when we presented a guitar to Martin Mabula to replace the one that was stolen.  Martin is blind and busking is the only way he has of earning a living.
Richard Tonkin has driven this project and he presented Martin with the guitar.
The rest of the evening was most enjoyable with music by Darren & Lauren, Bars, Nippy, John, Allan and Andreas & Marcus.  The musician who really blew everyone away was Yohan Song with his extraordinarily inventive guitar playing.
The 'TJ' have invited us to attend their meetings when ever we want to and have resurrected the idea of a joint fundraising concert to benefit musicians by producing CD's....if they still exist!



Careers Day



Saturday saw Rotarians descend on Holy Family College in Parktown for our annual Careers Day. We had more bases than ever this year with newcomers including Physiotherapy, Aviation and Beautician.  Another innovation was to bring all he bases relating to Business together plus some additional ones.  They ranged from Business Administration, Entrepreneurship, Retail etc.  This this was much more successful as it made questions and discussions much easier.
Our special thanks to all the non Rotarians for their help and assistance and especially to Mark Potterton, the school principal, who not only provides the venue but works tirelessly to make things happen and organises the tertiary institutions.
We have had some great feedback from the learners and that is what it is all about.


Thank you everyone for your support and helping make Careers Day such a success.




This Week
Our speaker is Moira Katz, the CEO of the National Childrens' Theatre.

The year 2014 marked the 25th Anniversary of NCT since it was established by Joyce Levinsohn in 1989, and which earned her a Lifetime Achievement Award. 
Since the new management under the leadership of Moira Katz in 2012, the company has been building a reputation as Gauteng�s premier children�s theatre, extending our range from regular theatre and musicals to include educational programmes, an HIV/AIDS information programme, a bullying awareness programme, classics for high schools.

NCT has made its mark by providing professionalism and artistic excellence in all aspects. The loyal and dedicated staff of 12 work hard to present 6 full theatre productions a year, catering to family theatre, schools outreach programmes, visits to rural areas, Saturday morning workshops for over 140 children, our NACTIES programme for budding Thespians, educational workshops in a variety of aspects of theatre. We believe in building community partnerships, creating jobs for newly qualified actors as well as developing a new generation of theatre supporters through entertaining and engaging programs.


For the past 24 years NCT has produced outstanding theatrical plays and educational programs which have won several national and international awards including 5 Naledi Awards, and an IPRA Golden World Award for Excellence in Public Relations in the Arts category.


A recent success was NCT's MANDELA DAY partnership with Hillbrow Theatre Project where we hosted an American Youth Group from Salt Lake City, who presented SYNERGY: A VOICE TO THE WORLD. Synergy is supported by Friendship Ambassadors Foundation, an NGO, formally associated with the United Nations Department of Public Information, with Consultative Status at UNESCO.

Good news for Ghana sanitation efforts

Rotary and USAID are creating Tippy Tap devices to encourage good hygiene in remote areas. The devices use a simple foot paddle to tip a water container so people can safely wash their hands.
Rotary and USAID are creating Tippy Tap devices to encourage good hygiene in remote areas. The devices use a simple foot paddle to tip a water container so people can safely wash their hands.
By Mohamed Keita, RI staff, Administrative Coordinator, Areas of Focus, Programs and Grants
In January, a new government came into office in Ghana and set a different tone in addressing access to water and public sanitation in the country. President Nana Akufo-Addo announced the creation of a Ministry for Sanitation and Water Resources. It is the first time an administration has dedicated the centrepiece of an executive cabinet agency to public sanitation.
Ghanaian Rotarians who are involved in the rollout of the Rotary-USAID International H2O Collaboration, a $4 million initiative to support lasting, positive change to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) initiatives in Ghana, have welcomed the move.
“A major challenge facing our country is access to water to our people. Indeed, ‘water for all’ is one of our slogans for our 2016 manifesto,” the president declared in the press. “We also made a slogan ‘a toilet for all’ and these are matters we take very seriously.”
Previously, WASH related issues in Ghana fell under the purview of the Ministry of Water resources, Works and Housing. President Akufo-Addo said the change was necessary because of the major challenge facing the country with respect to access to water and sanitation.
Both local and international stakeholders involved in WASH activities in Ghana have applauded the creation of the new ministry. “This is like being alone in a boat which is struggling to go upstream and suddenly getting another person to help with the rowing,” Ako Adotei, chair of the Host Committee of the Rotary-USAID partnership in Ghana, told me. The partnership, which involves 36 Rotary clubs, Global Communities, USAID’s implementing partner in Ghana, and the government via the Community Water & Sanitation Agency (CWSA), is preparing to roll out activities to improve water and sanitation conditions in 165 rural communities.
Beyond simply building infrastructure, the Rotary-USAID partnership involves peculiar aspects that are unusual in most Rotarian projects: empowering communities in: a) financial self-sustainability to support infrastructure maintenance b) advocating with local authorities for equitable resource allocation c) developing innovation from lessons learned. To this effect, about two dozen Rotarians participated in a training workshop on advocacy in mid-January in the capital Accra.
In Ghana, the poorest communities rely on local government and outside support for funding maintenance and operations costs for sanitation infrastructure. However, funding gaps and delays at the local district assemblies prevent the resources allocated by the Ghanaian government to trickle down to the neediest communities.
“Holding the district assemblies to account – that is really the greatest challenge,” says Peter Aniglo of the Rotary Club of Sunyani Central. Aniglo feels the workshop made clearer the pertinence of understanding the laws and regulations in order to train communities to understand their rights, the importance of helping communities organize self-funding methods, and the need to engage decision makers at the district assemblies.
The Rotarians came to the workshop with no prior experience with advocacy, but went away with a better understanding of its value in elevating the work of Rotary. Beatrice Baiden of the Rotary Club of Accra Dzorwolu, says “the training made me gain better understanding of the WASH sector with regards to policy and guidelines available, challenges of the WASH program, and how we could use advocacy to address the challenges as Rotarians.”
Aniglo notes the advocacy training is going a long way in helping sustain projects.

Tuesday 28 February 2017

Arts Festival, Orientation & Mobility, Boikanyo and a Somali Peace Fellow.

Last Week
Edward Selematsela, Helena Hugo and Paul Botes
It was a social meeting enlivened by the  visit by the artists who have donated paintings for the Arts Festival Raffle.  They are all well known to us and the biggest sellers at the Festival so we are really delighted by that they have been so generous in providing an amazing Raffle Carrot.  
Now all we have to do is sell the tickets!  Lenore Terreblanche is issuing the sheets and they are all numbered.


 Another surprise was a certificate presented to us by the SA Guide Dogs Association for our support with training sighted people at The College of Orientation and Mobility.  These people then return to the rural areas where they teach non-sighted people in the use of white canes and generally assist them with coping with their disability.
Roger Lloyd received the certificate on our behalf and handed it over during the meeting.  He has been a champion for the College of Orientation and Mobility ever since the club sponsored a guide dog.  He then realised that white cane training was money better spent as many more people would benefit.

This Week
Our speaker is Marilyn Bassin of Boikanyo - the Dion Herson Foundation.  Marilyn started the Foundation two years after she began volunteering at CP Clinic at Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital in January 2009. Whilst there she saw the desperate  need for disability equipment.
In 2011 Boikanyo the Dion Herson Foundation was established, essentially to fund equipment for disabled children who waited years for wheelchairs etc. Other wards got to hear of the equipment and assistance and began calling for assistance, Marilyn organised to buy equipment which afforded children to go home to mom- and- love, pressure prevention equipment, seating equipment and much more. Burnt, maimed, disabled, amputees, children with tracheostomies who lived for years at the hospital, hydrocephalic children, abandoned, raped, abused, bitten etc- in various paediatric wards received assistance. No one was turned away.Funding for two children to have surgery in a private hospital to close up a tracheostomy was arranged as well.


She met Riaz Simjee and together they ran a very successful Muslim / Jewish Interfaith teenage volunteer group –together the teens changed not only countless children’s lives at the hospital with their acts of goodwill, but also their own misconceptions about one another. This valuable humanitarian work lasted only until early in 2012 when the NGO was made unwelcome at the hospital, the CEO felt that our intention was to make Bara ‘look bad’. A complaint was laid with the SAHRC, they mediated but Boikanyo was not able to negotiate re entry into the hospital until years later, In 2012 the NGO moved to Mapetla, Soweto.




Manitoba honors Rotary Peace Fellow for public achievement

Abdikheir “Abdi” Ahmed
By 






Refugees who come to Winnipeg often end up living in areas that are predominantly inhabited by indigenous people. 
“Newcomers do not know much about the indigenous life and heritage and, without that knowledge, the first thing they encounter is people who are poor and stereotyped by the mainstream community,” says Abdikheir “Abdi” Ahmed, a 2011-12 Rotary Peace Fellow and immigration partnership coordinator for the Social Planning Council of Winnipeg. “Indigenous people may see immigrants as encroaching into their neighborhoods. There is tension between both groups.” 
Ahmed works to smooth relations, helping them see they have more in common than what divides them. “Integration is a two-way process,” he says. 
In recognition of his work, Ahmed received the Order of the Buffalo Hunt, one of the highest honours for public achievement issued by the Manitoba legislature, in January 2016. 
“I never thought what I was doing had this significance,” he says. “But I don’t look at what I have done. I look at what needs to be done to bring about better living standards for people.” 
Ahmed, 37, may understand the needs of immigrants better than most. 
Originally from Somalia, he and his family fled the conflict there and settled in Kenya when he was a child.

As a young adult, he moved to Canad
After graduation, Ahmed began working at the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization of Manitoba. 
He learned about the Rotary Peace Centers program from Noëlle DePape, a colleague who had earned her master’s degree at the University of Queensland, Australia, through the fellowship.
 After Ahmed completed his own peace fellowship at Queensland, he and DePape worked together to develop a curriculum for a summer course that they teach to high school students at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, part of a Rotary District 5550 (Manitoba and parts of Ontario and Saskatchewan) program called Adventures in Human Rights.“We help them view the world from the perspective that everyone’s rights are equal and understand the idea of building a community where everyone’s rights are respected and each person is given a fair opportunity,” he says. 
In addition to his work in Winnipeg, Ahmed serves on the board of Humankind International, an early childhood learning center that he co-founded at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya with two Somali friends who also immigrated to Winnipeg. He says it serves 150 children with four teachers, and he hopes to expand it to accommodate the many children who have to be turned away. 
Despite the suffering he has witnessed and the daily conflicts he works to resolve, Ahmed is optimistic about the prospects for peace and the potential of the peace centers program. 

“My hope is that in the next 20 to 50 years, if we have more Rotary Peace Fellows around the world who are speaking the same language and taking on a leadership role to create an interconnected world, things will change,” he says. “I also hope we can find an opportunity for Rotarians and past peace fellows to collaborate on projects in a more defined way.” 

Tuesday 21 February 2017

Scandal!, Lots of Visitors, Social Meeting, the Arts Festival and a Rotary Alumni Award


Last Week
Ralf Meyer, our visiting Rotarian from Frankfort, gave us a talk on the Libor Scandal.  I don't claim to understand much about banking and rate manipulation but what was fascinating was how much money the banks made and how small the fines were.  $9 Billion, as a fine, may sound like a lot of money but when you have made $37 Billion it's just a minor expense.
When numbers like this are banded about I do wonder why we pay bank charges.

Ralf also presented us with his Club Banner in exchange for the one we gave him some weeks ago.








And we had other visitors as well.

 Brian and Louise Hancock from the Rotary Club of Osborne Park, Perth, Australia.  Louise received the banner because she is the President of the club this year.

A special welcome to Russell Banful from Accra, Ghana.  He has visited us before.

All round a very social meeting.








This Week
It really is a Social Meeting.  Since we decided to have a meeting once a month when we can just chat to each other it's really been great.  I think a couple of our Rotary artists may be at the meeting as the build-up to the Arts Festival is about to begin.

Joan Sainsbury will be handing out Arts Festival Raffle Sheets and the prizes are fantastic this year so let's make an effort to sell as many as possible.: 


ROTARY ARTS FESTIVAL – GUEST ARTISTS

Helena Hugo
Helena Hugo has been a full-time artist since graduating from UP in 1996. She creates highly finished, detailed, expressions of people in pastel and recently also started to explore the world of fibre arts.
She has participated in many exhibitions across SA and abroad and her work has been bought by corporate and private collectors globally.
She was a finalist in BP Portrait, Absa Atelier, and New Signature Awards and ABSA KKNK’s festival artist for 2011.
She won the Bettie Cilliers-Barnard Award, earned top 10 at Ekurhuleni awards, top 5 at Sanlam awards and first prize in Beaux-Arts Réaliste et Impressionniste contest.


Paul Botes
Growing up among mountains and vineyards of the fairest Cape, awakened in Paul a deep and lasting awe of the eternal beauty of nature. During his years in the corporate world, he lived an alternate life dedicated to the expression of his artistic vision.
Over the past 24 years Paul has become the artist of choice of collectors and art lovers all over the country. From a Citation of Honour for Art in 2007, to having his work published in a book by Glynis CoxMillet-Clay, Paul continues to win acclaim with every exhibition of his work.

Edward Selematsela
Full time artist, born in Limpopo province of south Africa, Edward is passionate about his art. He had exhibited his art around Gauteng
and abroad in galleries like Johannesburg Art Gallery, Museum Pretoria, Museum Africa, Sasol Rosebank, Kubiak gallery USA, Scatzy USA, ABSA gallery, Alliance la Francaise, Bordeaux Pessac France. Though Edward is a full time artist, he takes one day a week to teach art to youth from disadvantaged backgrounds in Hillbrow Berea, which he started in 1995 till today.
Edward likes to experiment with a lot of mediums, he works hard to develop the art that speaks to him first and is easy for the viewer to understand. He prefers to tell a story through his paintings.

Guitar Presentation at TJ Audio Club Thursday 2nd March, 19,00 at Marks Park
You don't have to book for this and I had quite a bit to say about it last week so I won't repeat myself.  Just come and join us for a pleasant social evening.

Japanese Diplomat earns Rotary Alumni Award
The recipient of this year’s Rotary Alumni Global Service Award winner is Dr. Sadako Ogata, a former Ambassadorial Scholar and a past United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. 
Born in Japan to a family of diplomats, Ogata was drawn to studying international relations after Japan’s defeat in World War II. When she began graduate studies at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., USA, in 1951, she was part of the second class of Rotary Scholars from Japan.
“During that period, I also learned about the importance of community service and broadened my perspectives and experiences thanks to various exchanges with Rotarians,” she says. “The Rotary motto of Service Above Self has left a deep impression and has guided me ever since.”
After completing her doctorate at the University of California, Berkeley, Ogata returned to Japan to teach at International Christian University, which now hosts a Rotary Peace Center, and Sophia University, where she taught until accepting the post of United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (head of UNHCR, the United Nations refugee agency) in 1991. She also represented Japan at the UN General Assembly, served at the Permanent Mission of Japan to the United Nations, and chaired the UNICEF executive board.
During her decade-long tenure with UNHCR, Ogata helped refugees who fled the Gulf War, the ethnic conflicts in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, and Cold War-era strife in Afghanistan and former Soviet satellites. She has been credited with expanding UNHCR’s budget and staff and strengthening its relations with the UN Security Council by emphasizing the link between refugees and international security.
“Protecting refugees is — by its nature — controversial,” Ogata has said. “Carrying out this dynamic and action-oriented function requires us to challenge the sovereign preserve of states to deal with non-citizens and, in some instances, their own people.”
Since leaving UNHCR in 2000, she has remained active in government and international affairs, serving as co-chair of the UN Human Security Commission and as a special representative of the Japanese government in Afghanistan. She led the Japanese International Cooperation Agency for two terms and advised then-Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi.
Her government work has shown her the power of private citizens and civic groups to effect change.
“We live in a rapidly changing world,” Ogata says. “As the world is confronted with threats more complex than ever before, the role of civil society and the linkages among people has become more important than ever.”
The award for Rotary Alumni Association of the Year went to the Alumni Association of Rotary District 1210 in England. These alumni regularly visit club meetings and district events, and they lead a project to provide children’s books to homes across the district.

Monday 13 February 2017

Dogs, Chickens, the Libor Scandal & Police and Peace Fellowships in Philadelphia

Last Week
Angie Thornton, accompanied by Colin Thornton of Benoni van Ryn Rotary Club, gave us a talk on Therapy Dogs.  it was very interesting seeing how these dogs are used in all sorts of therapeutic activities from old age homes to children in hospitals.  Angie is passionate about the use of these dogs and the biggest problem appears to be finding people with suitable dogs who are willing to give up their time.  
The Thorntons brought two dogs with them, both rescued Cavalier King Charles Spaniels.  I don't think they found Rotary an exciting experience.  One obviously  found it totally boring!

 On the lighter side someone casually mentioned to me that there such things as Therapy Chickens in the UK.  The mind boggles!  So I googled it.

A therapy chicken is specially selected and trained, and its owner specifically trained to handled a bird in order to provide therapeutic visitation, comfort, education and entertainment to people in retirement homes, assisted living, schools, rehabilitation facilities and other suitable venues. Learn how to work with your birds (often household pets) to take them safely and sanitarily to visitation places.

I can't find a picture of one...but in the USA:

CHESTERFIELD, VA (WWBT) -
A family is facing fines for chickens they consider therapeutic for their autistic son.
Robin Braun first discovered her son, Jonathan, was autistic when his development was different as a child. He is enrolled in different school programs and at home displays an interest in animals.
A few years ago, the family went to a state fair, where her son instantly fell in love with the chickens. He has since gotten many as pets, bonding with the hens.
His mom says the benefit goes beyond companionship for their son, who often feels isolated from his peers.
"It's always trying to get him to learn the value of teaching him the chores. He's got to have water, they have to have feed, you've got to go out there and pick up the eggs, you got to clean the stall," said Robin Braun.
As Ted Barclay, a Code Compliance Supervisor with the Chesterfield County Planning Department explains, the first call came in about the Braun family three years ago. A neighbor was calling to say the family had chickens in a residential area.
At that point, the department recognized that an amendment was being made to the county ordinance which may allow the Braun family to keep the chicken. As Barclay explained, his office did not fine the family at that time, hoping the ordinance would help them.
That ordinance now states that if you live in a residential zoning district, "keeping of up to six chickens is permitted with certain restrictions."
This summer, another tip came into Barclay's office that the family was in violation of that updated ordinance. When his team went to check it out, they found the family had 15 chickens. The judge gave them a 30-day grace period to make arrangements.
As of Monday morning, the family was able to place eight chickens at their daughter's home. The remaining seven stayed at home. On Tuesday, the Braun's are due back in court to pay fines from having too many chickens.
The family says separating the hens made Jonathan have a meltdown, torn apart with losing some of his companions.
Barclay suggested the family bring documentation to the county attorney's office to show the chickens are therapeutic. He says he wants to work with the family so they don't face fines and so they can keep the chickens without violating the county code.
The family says they are having a difficult time finding someone with Jonathan's school program to write those letters since he is out of school for the summer.
Copyright 2016 WWBT NBC12. All rights reserved
This Week
Ralf Meyer, our visiting Frankfurt Rotarian is going to talk about the Libor Scandal.   
The scandal was a series of fraudulent actions connected to the Libor (London Interbank Offered Rate) and also the resulting investigation and reaction. The Libor is an average interest rate calculated through submissions of interest rates by major banks across the world. The scandal arose when it was discovered that banks were falsely inflating or deflating their rates so as to profit from trades, or to give the impression that they were more creditworthy than they were. Libor underpins approximately $350 trillion in derivatives. It is currently administered by NYSE Euronext, which took over running the Libor in January 2014.



Police officer takes the lessons of the Rotary peace programme to the streets of Philadelphia




The tension is palpable as we cruise through a neighborhood of dilapidated row houses in one of the toughest parts of Philadelphia. Buildings jaggedly rise from the street – like a mouth full of busted teeth.  
Lt. D.F. Pace nods to acknowledge a stare. He understands.  
In his 15-year career with the Philadelphia Police Department, Pace has taken pride in being naturally tolerant and level-headed, qualities that helped him rise through the ranks. 
But he is human. To maintain a level head under pressure, at times he uses several techniques he learned through the Rotary Peace Fellowship program.
In 2010, Pace applied for the intensive three-month professional certificate program in Thailand. The idea had come to then-Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey through a suggestion from the Philadelphia Rotary Club, the 19th-oldest Rotary club in the world. Pace relished the challenge. “As soon as I saw it, I said, ‘This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.’”  
Philadelphia Police Department
Pace saw the fellowship as a way to defuse a developing powder keg. “Even before events like what happened in Ferguson [Mo.], I saw an unease developing between police and the community,” he recalls. “I thought, ‘If we don’t get a handle on this, the lid’s going to come off.’” 
The growing tension between police and residents also troubled members of the Philadelphia Rotary Club. They considered a few ideas until Joseph Batory, then scholarship chair of the club, had a light-bulb moment: the peace fellowship. 
“Sometimes the obvious is right in front of us,” says Batory. “It finally dawned on me that a police officer is at the very forefront of violence prevention and peacebuilding and, as such, would be a great fit for Rotary’s three-month certification program.”
In D.F. Pace, known as “D” to friends, Batory believed the club had found the perfect candidate: “He was an up-and-coming young lieutenant with patrol experience on the streets, but he’s also a lawyer and thus well-versed in the legal aspects of proper policing,” he says. “He reflected Commissioner Ramsey’s vision of creating a new generation of police officers with enhanced professionalism, dramatically improved judgment, and dedication to being instruments of peace.”
Friction, racial and otherwise, between police and the people they protect is not new. But the killings of unarmed black men by police in recent years, captured on camera phones and broadcast on the nightly news, have indeed touched a match to the kindling that Pace and others saw piling higher and higher. 

Philadelphia has not had the kind of headline-grabbing police-involved shootings that St. Louis, Chicago, and New York have had. However, it ranks in the top 20 in murder and crime rates among big cities in the United States. Almost from day one, Ramsey (who retired in January 2016) looked for innovative ways to avoid the former and reduce the latter.
“Ramsey’s a forward thinker,” says Pace. “He was always looking for ways to infuse new ideas into his police department.” Even so, when Philadelphia Rotary Club members pitched the peace fellowship to Ramsey, they kept their expectations low. But when Batory met with the commissioner, Ramsey took out a notepad and listened intently. He liked the idea and put out a citywide memorandum inviting officers to apply. 
Each year, Rotary selects up to 100 individuals from around the world to receive fully funded academic fellowships at a peace center. These fellowships cover tuition and fees, room and board, round-trip transportation, and all internship and field-study expenses.
In just over a decade, the Rotary Peace Centers have trained more than 1,000 fellows for careers in peacebuilding. Many of them go on to serve as leaders in national governments, nongovernmental organizations, the military, and international organizations like the United Nations and World Bank.
Pace says his cohort included a labor relations specialist, a women’s rights advocate, educators, and lawyers.

As Ramsey  and the Philadelphia Rotary Club hoped, Pace incorporates what he learned in Thailand into the seminars he teaches for other officers, including a class called Fair and Impartial Policing. He also helps organize community town halls and speaks to Rotary clubs.
Perhaps most important, other ranking officers in Philadelphia – sergeants, lieutenants, and captains – who have taken Pace’s class are disseminating the information to their recruits. It’s a more impressive feat than it may seem. 
The class wasn’t an easy sell, says Lt. Christine McShea, a 26-year veteran of the force who was required to take the class as part of a promotion. “It’s a difficult topic to get across, but he did a great job with it,” mainly, she says, “because he wasn’t trying to sugarcoat everything.” 
One of the lessons Pace imparts comes directly from his time as a peace fellow. “Conflict itself is neither good nor bad. It’s neutral,” he tells his classes. “The good or bad comes from how we manage conflict.”