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 15 October 2018

Gavin Henry, Inter Club Quiz, Social Meeting, Christmas is Coming and Barging about on the Kennet & Avon.

Last Week
It's back to normal after the very successful Youth Leadership Course.

Our speaker was Gavin Henry, Chairman of the Bedfordview Community Policing Forum.  He became involved following a burglary at his own home.
I got the impression that Bedfordview was rather like the Wild West and dangerous to visit let alone live there.  From 6 police vehicles they are down to two one of which has a puncture that hasn't been repaired, the detectives, all 35 of them are sitting in a room little bigger than a broom cupboard as they have been evicted from the building where they used to be owing to non-payment of rent and so it went on.
He told us that we cannot rely on the police, that we have to be vigilant when driving home in case we are followed and we should turn our home into a fortress and then ensure that electric fences etc are working.  He also told us how few electric fences are turned on and how criminals check that they are functioning.  I was tempted to run round the neighbourhood and see if the criminal electric fence checking system works.  If the alarm goes off run away and then come back later.  If I was about 11 years old it would create lots of fun possibilities.

It was a great pleasure having our former Exchange Student from Alaska, Emily Longbrake,who is an  artist and designer and her husband Bill Jamison as guests as well as Stewart Mutegeki.
Stewart Mutegeki
Emily Longbrake & Bill Jamison






















The Inter-club Quiz, Friday 16th November
Please be in touch with Pam Donaldson about this as soon as possible.  I know it's quite a long way ahead but Johannesburg Club are having to estimate the numbers coming and they have reckoned on 20 people coming from our club.  Last week Pam had heard from nobody....so you can see that I am as bad as everyone else!







Social Dinner in Cyrildene on Thursday Evening
Don't forget to book with me if you still want to come. 
There are 15 at the moment and we have booked for 20.

This Week.
It's a Social Meeting and it's also a Board Meeting.  One thing that you should always remember is that any Rotarian can attend a Board Meeting though if there is a discussion that results in a vote you can't vote.  In all my years of being on various boards I can only ever remember one vote!

Christmas Lunch




Friday 7th December.  We will try to book Parkview Golf Club again.

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.”

Monday 1 October 2018

Business, District Seminars, a Quiz, Rotary Friendship Exchange & Rotary Day at the UN

Last Week
It was a Business Meeting.  Here's the Board holding forth to the assembled multitudes.  I seldom take pictures at Business Meetings so here is the exception to the rule:
President Jean Bernardo
Mark Franklin (Commemoration Fund)
James Croswell (International)

John Symons (Finance)
Costa Qually (Community & Vocational)


Melodene Stonestreet (Membership)





Les Short (Foundation)
Ann Hope-Bailie (Secretary)
Joan Sainsbury (Youth)
And here, for the first time, is a picture of a happy wine winner, Pam Donaldson , who checks us in to the meeting.  Past President Lyn Collocott, in the background, is another Board Member.
Rosebank @ The District Membership & Foundation Seminar


It was also a weekend that saw our monthly collection at Spar Norwood...I don't have any pictures of that... and the club was well represented at the Membership/Foundation Seminar.

And here is our invitation to the Quiz.....more details will follow.  Just put the date in your diary.

This Week
David Bradshaw is an enthusiastic supporter of Rotary Friendship Exchange so we are looking forward to seeing the pictures of the ones he has been on......and naturally he is going to sell it to us.



Rotary Day at the United Nations celebrates two organizations’ shared vision for peace and highlights the critical humanitarian activities that Rotary and the UN lead around the world.

The event also honors people who make a positive difference in their community, their country, or around the world. Each year, about 1,000 guests attend.

Who attends?

Rotary Day at the United Nations is open to the public. The audience includes: 
  • Rotary International president and Board of Directors, Rotary Foundation Trustees, other Rotary leaders, and Rotary club members
  • Leaders from the United Nations 
  • Experts from other nongovernmental agencies
  • Renowned humanitarians 
  • Young leaders who attend to exchange ideas, learn about the UN, and meet international leaders

Rotary Day at the UN 2018

Under this year’s theme of “Youth Innovation: Crafting Solutions to Emerging Challenges,” Rotary will honor six innovators who are under age 35.
More than 750 participants will attend the event on Saturday, 10 November, at the United Nations Information Centre in Nairobi, Kenya.
Rotary leaders, UN officials, and humanitarian experts will educate and inspire participants to find innovative strategies for addressing humanitarian challenges at local, regional, and global levels.
General and breakout sessions will address the UN Sustainable Development Goals and how to harness the technological revolution for good, as well as young people’s role in creating change. A special session on the environment will highlight the importance of environmentally sustainable development and offer concrete actions that everyone can take to ensure a clean and healthy world.
The event will feature an Innovation Fair where Rotary clubs, businesses, and other organizations will exhibit humanitarian projects and cutting-edge technology that can help address the challenges we face.
The event is open to Rotary members and guests.



Tuesday 25 September 2018

Dr Neville Howes, a Business Meeting and Polio Plus in Uganda

Dr Neville Howes
Dr Neville & Liz Howes
President Jean has already paid tribute to Neville in her column and we were very fortunate to have such a distinguished medical doctor as a member of our club as his input on matters medical was invaluable, especially where the Baragwanath Palliative Care Project was concerned.  His professional life as Superintendent of what was then the Johannesburg General Hospital and his term as Director General of Health for KZN was of major assistance to the club and gave us a great deal of credibility when negotiating with Province.
I was fortunate enough to follow him as President and what always struck me about him was his ability to see through arguments and discussions  at committee and board meetings and get to the nub of the issue.  He would then tell us how we would handle the particular problem.

Most important of all, he was a very nice man and we will miss him.  I echo President Jean in expressing our condolences to Liz and all his family.

Last Week and This Week
Last week was a Social Meeting so we just had an entertaining time and this week is a Business Meeting so we are expected to concentrate a bit more.

This coming weekend is another Collection at Spar weekend and I am sure we will hear from Costa Qually how we are getting on with the roster.   Also Saturday it's the Rotary Foundation and Membership Seminar and I am delighted to see that our club is represented.
The Rotary Leadership Institute Courses are also coming up so I do hope that we will be represented there as well.

A Rotaractor ventures deep into her native Uganda with a polio vaccination team as part of Rotary’s newest virtual reality film, Two Drops of Patience


Health Workers must have a lot of patience.  I found that out when I traveled to a mountain community on the border of Uganda and Kenya, 200 miles from my home in Kampala, to join a vaccination team. Just getting to the homes was a challenge, let alone persuading the parents to let us in. We had to park the cars, carry our coolers with the polio vaccine safely tucked inside between ice packs, and move on our own two feet, just walking and walking. It’s a bit of a trick – using your hands to steady yourself while you climb, yet still having to carry this heavy cooler. There were lots of streams and rivers, and at times we had to jump across or walk through the water. 
We would sometimes walk for 30 minutes before we would see a home, because they’re not so close to one another. It was lonely and scary, walking through the trees and rocks. The challenge was getting as far as we could, keeping in mind how long the journey back would take. If we walked three hours to get to a home, we needed to be sure we had three hours to get back before dark. And all that with the possibility of not finding a child at home and having to return another day.
At one point I just sat down. My feet ached. I was sunburned – and until this trip, I didn’t think black people could get sunburned. 
But we had to keep going to save someone’s life.

I’ve been involved in Rotaract for a couple of years now, but I’ve never done anything quite like this. My mother, Margaret Okello, is a member of the Rotary Club of Kampala Naguru. She saw that I had a little energy that could be used more productively. So she suggested I join Rotaract, which I did in 2016 when I was 21. My club is involved in an adopt-a-village project in Gulu in northern Uganda, an area that saw 20 years of armed conflict.  I’ve been there twice. And our club collects money for polio eradication. 
I knew about polio. I had seen victims of the disease. I had been immunized against it. It’s odd, though – it’s something you hear about, but you don’t really get how bad it is. I found there was an opportunity to do something more to help with the eradication efforts through one of my friends, Fred Masadde. He’s a member of the Rotary Club of Kampala Ssese Islands and a Rotary public image coordinator. I decided to apply. 
In November 2017, I met the team of filmmakers in Kampala who would be documenting the polio immunization effort for Rotary’s newest virtual reality film. I had to request a week off from my job with the Uganda Cancer Society, where I work finding donors and funds to help with their program activities. We chartered a plane to the town of Moroto, which is way, way up in northeastern Uganda at the foot of Mount Moroto. There, we met up with people from UNICEF and the local government, as well as the Rotarians and Rotaractors who had driven three hours from the town of Soroti and would also be giving polio drops. Since there isn’t a Rotary club in this part of the country, Soroti Rotarians occasionally hold medical camps here.

It was another one-hour drive to Tapac, the community on the mountain where we were to work. I had never been in that part of the country before – it’s more than eight hours from my home by car. I was so shocked. I had only seen places like this in movies and television documentaries. 
The poverty was overwhelming. The thatched huts that people live in are built by the women; the men do the cattle keeping. The women harvest long grass and dry it, and also tie together bundles of sticks. Some use the mosquito nets that they get for malaria prevention to tie their things together. Some of the homes are raised on sticks, and the family’s livestock are kept under the house. The doors are so small that you can’t actually walk through them – you crawl.
The health center is up in the hills. It’s really small, and people come to it from miles around. There’s no electricity in that area, but luckily someone donated solar panels to run the refrigerator, since the polio vaccine has to be kept cool. A nurse there taught us about the cold chain and how to place the vaccine in the coolers, and explained how to administer it without contaminating the vial – you have to hold the dropper above the children’s mouths without touching. 
Then we went to one of the homes to get some hands-on experience. When it was my turn, I was shaking. I was worried I would make a mistake and drop in more than two drops. It’s like the way you keep blinking when you’re trying to put in eyedrops. The baby keeps moving! So it can be tricky. We learned the way to hold a child’s mouth so it remains open – you kind of gently press the cheeks together. You have to smile, sing to them. You couldn’t come with a tough face – you want the child to feel comfortable with you. And of course the mother helps keep her child calm

We went up into the mountains the next day to give the vaccinations, but first the film crew needed to talk to people and let them know what was going to happen. Imagine a place where you rarely see visitors, and then you see that camera drone up in the sky. Suddenly people would come out, wondering what was going on. 
And because the government has tried to disarm people in the area, which has a history of violent conflict among tribes, often related to cattle raiding, they are suspicious of everyone. They dress differently and do their hair differently, so you can tell an outsider for miles. 
We didn’t know that people there believe you are not supposed to climb the trees or sit on the rocks. The people hold them in high regard; they’re sacred. They got angry with us because they thought we were provoking them. This is why, when you go places, you need to know the community well. Because who would think sitting on rocks is a bad thing? 
We always moved with the nurse, because people knew her and she knew the language, Ng’akarimojong. We had to tell people why it is important to give the polio vaccine. One father asked me if I wanted to kill his child or if this was a family planning method. We had to spend a good amount of time with him. 
I met a man in Tapac who had been crippled by polio. He can’t run. He can’t walk. He can only crawl. When it rains, the water rushes down the mountain carrying rocks and mud. He tries to get out of the way as fast as possible. But he gets stuck. Imagine being an adult and being pelted with rocks and mud. When I met him, I realized that wheelchairs don’t help in a place like this. Wheelchairs won’t get you up the mountain. You need your legs.  
When we first started filming, I was focused on what we were going to shoot. But that changed when I did my first vaccination. I felt like a hero. It was a satisfying feeling, knowing you probably just changed someone’s life. I felt I had done something very meaningful. I had prevented somebody from being sick. I had given somebody opportunity. Those two drops felt like a life-changing action. 

Monday 17 September 2018

District Foundation Seminar, Christmas Hampers, a Social Meeting and Thoughts on Rotoract.

Last Week
Owing to my own stupidity I didn't hear Les Short's talk on the Rotary Foundation as, just after arriving at Rotary I realised that I had neglected to do something at home and ran away again.
At school, when I was 11, we had Sex Education at school but I was ill and missed it and have been trying to catch up ever since.  If you are trying to catch up on Foundation please try and attend the District Foundation and Membership Seminar on Saturday 29th September.  Contact Linda Stokes on linda@aircelsius.co.za .  The Foundation Seminar is concentrating on the problems District has with Applications from Clubs for District Grants, Global Grants, Peace Fellowship applications etc so it will be a really worthwhile seminar and should help us avoid these pitfalls..

Christmas Hamper Collections

Our next collection for Christmas hampers takes place at the Norwood Spar on Saturday 29 and Sunday 30 September.  Please will you consider when you can kindly assist by filling one of the shifts.  No one particularly enjoys being on duty and asking shoppers to make a donation.  However,
it is only a two hour shift and it is one of the ways that Rosebank Rotary makes a contribution to the community.
Please let Costa Qually know at Rotary which shift you will be prepared to do.  The August collection was very successful and at this rate we should be able to exceed our former collections at Makro. 

 This Week
It's a social meeting so make the most of it and sit with people you usually don't sit with.

An Interesting article on Rotaract, spotted by Mark Franklin

Salman Ali Rajput, past president of
the Rotaract Club of Nawabshah
 Central, Pakistan, and District 3271 secretary
have always been involved in extracurricular activities practically since I was old enough to walk. But it wasn’t until I joined Rotaract in 2015 that I discovered the many ways a young person can learn and grow while serving the local community. My life has been transformed by Rotaract. Before I joined, I felt like a common man. Today, I have been groomed into a proud global citizen. Here are five ways Rotaract can change your life.

Meeting new people: Rotaract club service opportunities are so diverse that students in any field of study can develop their leadership and organization skills while paving the way to a better future. I am the charter and past president of my club and district secretary. I have been fortunate to take part in many service activities, and even earned recognition in my district. But better than any of these honors has been the opportunity to learn new things and meet new people.
Kindling a desire to help others: During my time in Rotaract, we took part in several service projects helping those in need in underprivileged communities. It developed within me a stronger desire to help others. I felt more connected to my community and more motivated to think about others. This in turn meet a need within me. I believe those who help others are themselves blessed. And I think this is one of the aims of  Service Above Self.
Broadening your horizons: Rotaract’s international reach has given me connections with other members around the globe. This is a wonderful thing that makes our organization unique. It provides a friendly environment where young people from many different cultures can learn and exchange insights.
Becoming a peacemaker: By providing a place where people come together from many different countries, Rotaract is building peace. We are being knit together into an international family.
Growing professionally: One of the most important ways I have changed is professionally. Rotaract has built my confidence, communication skills, and leadership abilities — all of which are so critical in today’s world. I no longer shake at the prospect of public speaking, whether it’s addressing audiences at the district level or talking at club or business meetings.
I share my story. But Rotaract has been changing thousands of young people’s lives for more than 50 years. It has been giving them a platform to advance literacy, improve water and sanitation, and help the environment. Every day, somewhere, a Rotaract club is doing something to address a problem or issue.
If you have a desire to create positive change in the world and be an inspiration to others, while being changed yourself, join a Rotaract club.


Monday 10 September 2018

Human Trafficking, Friendship Exchange, The Rotary Foundation & Shelterbox

Last Week

Major Carin Holmes took leave from the Rotary Club of Johannesburg New Dawn to talk to us about Human Trafficking.  It was an excellent talk with a really good presentation on the topic.  The biggest problem seems to be that people are extremely gullible when it comes the whole thing and if either in a desperate financial situation or extremely greedy become an easy prey to the well organised criminal structures.  I don't know what we as Rotarians can do about it other than possibly look at teh educational aspect, particularly where young people are concerned.

We welcomed two visitors, our Rotary Ann President June Virtue and Marilyn Bassin of the Boikanyo Project https://boikanyo.org.za/
Marilyn Bassin

Ann President June Virtue 






















Rotary Friendship Exchange
District D3141 from Mumbai will be in Johannesburg 18/19 October, and our District are looking for hosts for 5 couples for the two nights.They are professional/business people.

Please contact David Bradshaw if you would be prepared to host one couple.

Lester Connock Awards
I  have just received the following email from Shakiera Sallie who was one of the recipients last year.

She also attached the confirmation from her supervisor which I have not included.

Dear Sir/Madam,

I have passed my Research with a distinction. All minor corrections have been completed and the final documents have been signed and handed to the Health Faculty.

I would like to say a huge thank you to the Rotary Club for the financial assistance and assisting me to complete my studies and fulfill my goal and have included the  Rotary club in my letter of acknowledgement in my Research Report

Should you need me to assist you in any way please feel free to contact me.

Thanking you.

Kind Regards,

Shakiera 

This Week
Les Short, who is the Foundation Director on our Board, is going to talk about the Rotary Foundation.
This is an important talk because we are very dependent on the Foundation for District and Global Grants.  We have made use of both recently and we are looking towards another Global Grant.  We are also hoping to have a candidate for a Rotary Peace Fellowship next year.
District is extremely worried by the lack of commitment to Foundation by clubs...only a minority make even the minimum amount per member as suggested by RI.  Our club has been generous and in the Foundation's centenary year we donated R100 000 on behalf of members. As that was 3 years ago District will receive that money back from Foundation this year.

ShelterBox


ShelterBox was founded in 2000 in the town of Helston, Cornwall, UK. That same year the Rotary club of Helston-Lizard adopted it as its millennium project.[4]
The first consignment of 143 boxes was sent to victims of the 2001 Gujarat earthquake. Over the next three years the project matured and by the end of 2004 nearly 2,600 boxes had been dispatched, following 16 major disasters. The company significantly expanded its work in response to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami.
In 2002, ShelterBox's American affiliate was adopted as a project of the Rotary Club of Lakewood Ranch in Sarasota, Fla. In 2004, ShelterBox USA was officially established as a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization.
One of ShelterBox's largest responses was the 7.0 magnitude earthquake in Haiti in 2010. ShelterBox provided shelter for 28,000 families or approximately 25% of all tents delivered in areas surrounding Port-au-Prince.
In 2010, the Australian and Canadian branches of ShelterBox split from the main organization and formed new organizations called Disaster Aid Australia and Disaster Aid Canada, respectively. However, new teams in Australia and Canada were immediately put in place and the charity's work was unaffected by the breakaway groups.
After the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan, ShelterBox provided assistance to about 1,600 families in the disaster region.
In February 2013, Alison Wallace was appointed CEO of ShelterBox after her position as director of international fundraising at Amnesty International.

Rotary International

Rotary International renewed their three-year Project Partner agreement with ShelterBox in 2016 which increases their joint capacity to help families around the world displaced by disaster.
The agreement formalizes the sixteen-year bond between the two organizations and cements the place of Rotarians around the world at the heart of ShelterBox activities. ShelterBox was the first officially recognized ‘Project Partner’ of Rotary International and remains the only Project Partner focused on disaster relief.
Rotary clubs across Great Britain and Ireland raise around £1.5 million each year for the charity and some Rotarians are ShelterBox Response Team members who go out to disaster areas and provide hands-on help during times of need. These disasters can be anything from dealing with the aftermath of tsunamis to helping refugees from war-torn countries who have fled conflict.
In 2000, the Rotary club of Helston-Lizard adopted ShelterBox as its millennium project.  It has since become one of the world’s leading humanitarian aid charities providing emergency shelter and supplies to over 107,000 families worldwide following disaster.