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 July 2019

A Social Meeting, Lenore's Story and our New RI President

Last Week
It was a Social Meeting which really means that we chatted and told a few jokes.  I was so busy chatting and telling jokes that didn't have time to take any photographs.  Seriously, there is not much to say other than time seemed to fly by and that is as it should be.  The reason why we now have a social meeting every month is because members complained that they never had a chance to talk to each other with so many speakers and a Business Meeting.  It really was necessary.....though the President, as usual, had a few things to say.

This Week
There's a Board Meeting before our normal meeting when Lenore Terreblanche will tell us 'Her Story'. 

These personal accounts by members are always so interesting and so much better than the old 'My Job' talks.  I don't know who suggested them in the first place but it was an inspired suggestion.

Every photo we have of Lenore has her eyes closed.......?




Club Assembly
After the Board Meeting we will, no doubt, be told the date.
It is so important that everyone who can, does attend. A Club Assembly is the only body with
legislative authority.  In other words only a Club Assembly can set the subs for the year or make changes to the Club's byelaws.  It is also when the Board will set out its goals for the year under the various avenues of service and the Assembly has the authority to accept or reject them.  The Board is subject to the Club and can only make recommendations for the Club to approve and the Assembly is the vehicle for that approval.

The Club Assembly is so important that it is necessary to give three weeks notice to members.

The Past is Prologue



FOR NEARLY 40 YEARS, Mark Daniel Maloney and his family have demonstrated that Rotary connects the world. Now, the self-described “cheerful traveler” embarks on the next phase of his life’s journey: serving as Rotary International’s new president.
To read the full story, click on link below:
https://rotarydownunder.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/New-RI-President.pdf

Monday 8 July 2019

Lighthouses, a Social Meeting and Roots of Peace

Last Week
David Kinghorn
David Kinghorn gave us an extremely interesting talk on Robert Stevenson and Stevenson Lighthouses in Scotland.  Building lighthouses became a family and generational activity and the the Stevensons were still building or updating them well into the 20th century.

RLS


As in every family there is a black sheep and Robert Lewis Balfour Stephenson rebelled against his father and grandfather and succeeded in failing his engineering degree at Edinburgh University.  He eventually gained a law degree but never practiced law; a disappointment to his family.  He became increasingly bohemian and changed his name to Robert Louis Stevenson and the rest is history.




 The sunlight faded out some Rotarians but not our visitor, Thabelang Ralefu.

This Week
It's a social meeting and no doubt we will have a some feedback on Discon from President Jean.  We have also found that these meetings provide a very useful forum for prospective members to ask questions about the club and our projects...so if you are interested come and do so.

Vocational Service Awards
Start thinking about people whom you would like to propose for one of these awards.
First of all they must be people who have not received any recognition in the past.  We have made mistakes about that, one of our awardees had even received a Paul Harris from another Rotary Club!
Ideally we are looking for someone who is unobtrusive in what they do and yet the community benefit enormously from their involvement.
It maybe because of their skills but it must be pro bono work and it mustn't just be because they do their job well.
As usual we will make the awards at a Friday lunchtime meeting in February 2020 and the Lester Connock Award will be presented at the same time.

Heidi Kühn
Rotary Club of San Francisco
Heidi Kühn arrived in Utsunomiya, Japan, in 1975, a few months after the end of the Vietnam War. She was a Rotary Youth Exchange student, and what she saw and experienced in Japan led her to reflect on the post-World War II reconciliation between that country and her native United States. “The idea of former enemies bridging borders for peace left an impression in my heart,” she says.
More than 20 years later, Kühn had become a successful television journalist. She was asked by the Commonwealth Club of California, a well-known public affairs forum, to host an event featuring Jerry White, a land mine survivor who had escorted Princess Diana on her last humanitarian mission in 1997. It was a short time after the death of Diana, whose efforts to ban land mines had inspired Kühn. “That night, I made a prophetic toast,” she recalls. “‘May the world go from mines to vines.’”
Kühn decided to act on those words and founded a nonprofit called Roots of Peace that has worked to remove hundreds of thousands of land mines and other unexploded ordnance from farmland and replace them with productive fields, such as orchards and vineyards.
In Afghanistan, the organization has helped restore fields in the Shomali Plain north of Kabul, which had been a thriving agricultural region until the Taliban burned vineyards, cut down fruit trees, and laid land mines. Since 2003, Roots of Peace has connected growers with supermarket chains in India. 
Roots of Peace is also partnering with the Rotary clubs of San Francisco and Bangkok Klongtoey, Thailand, which received a $197,000 global grant from The Rotary Foundation to remove land mines and plant black pepper vines and taro in Vietnam’s Quang Tri province, and help farmers market the high-value crop.
Kühn and her husband and Roots of Peace partner, Gary Kühn, visited Afghanistan in 2018 to see the fruits of their labor. They flew out of Afghanistan on a cargo plane carrying the harvest. 
“To me, that was the greatest inspiration, the greatest moment in my life, to know that we can turn dreams into reality,” Kühn says. “Not just for ourselves, but for countless farmers and families around the world.” 

Monday 1 July 2019

Jean's Induction, Robert Stevenson & Peacebuilding

Last Week
saw Jean Bernardo's Induction for a second year as President with a lunch at Bryanston Country Club
It was a most enjoyable lunch with excellent food and congratulations to Jean for going 'Smart Casual' and getting away from our over 60 years of Black Tie Dinners.  When thinking about this I did wonder if it wasn't 'White Tie'when it started?  Probably not as I have a photograph of a family member as President of the Rotary Club of Barnes taken in the late 1920's and that's Black Tie.

PDG Ken Stonestreet had the pleasure of inducting Jean for her second term in a row which was a very nice gesture on her part.

Ann President June Virtue inducted Debby Steenhof and Penny Robinson as Presidents for half a year each.  A very good idea as it does spread the load.

All the photographs are on the separate Induction Page as it means we could put them all in willynilly but there are no captions because if I were to caption them all you would only get The Ramble much too late.
You can easily save a copy for yourself as they are in jpg format so click and save.

This Week

David Kinghorn is going to talk to us about Robert Stevenson, the Scottish engineer famed for his design and construction of lighthouses.  I can find nothing about David Kinghorn so here is a short introduction to Robert Stevenson.
Robert Stevenson was born in Glasgow on 8th June 1772. Robert’s father Alan and his brother Hugh ran a trading company from the city dealing in goods from the West Indies, and it was on a trip to the island of St Kitts that the brothers met their early end, when they contracted and died from a fever.
Without a regular income, Robert’s mother was left to bring up young Robert as best she could. Robert received his early education at a charity school before the family moved to Edinburgh where he was enrolled at the High School. A deeply religious person, it was through her church work that Robert’s mother met, and later married, Thomas Smith. A talented and ingenious mechanic, Thomas had recently been appointed engineer to the newly formed Northern Lighthouse Board.
Throughout his latter teenage years Robert quite literally served his apprenticeship as assistant to his stepfather. Together they worked to supervise and improve the handful of crude coal-fired lighthouses that existed at that time, introducing innovations such as lamps and reflectors.
Robert worked hard, and so impressed, that at the tender age of just 19 he was left to supervise the construction of his first lighthouse on the island of Little Cumbrae in the River Clyde. Perhaps recognising his lack of a more formal education, Robert also began to attend lectures in mathematics and science at the Andersonian Institute (now University of Strathclyde) in Glasgow.
Seasonal by its very nature, Robert successfully combined his practical summer work of constructing lighthouses in the Orkney Islands, whilst devoting the winter months to academic study at Edinburgh University.
In 1797 Robert was appointed engineer to the Lighthouse Board and two years later married his stepsister Jean, Thomas Smith’s eldest daughter by an earlier marriage.

When Tamara Smiley Hamilton was 13 years

 old, the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles,

 where her family lived, erupted in violence. 

In August 1965, police pulled over an African American man for a driving offense and the situation spiraled out of control. Long-simmering tensions in the largely black neighborhood came to the surface, and for six days the community was torn by riots, fire, looting, and violence. Thirty-four people died, over 1,000 were injured, and thousands more were arrested. Hamilton can still recall hearing glass shattering and seeing embers flying as buildings burned.
"I remember thinking, 'This can’t be all there is to my life. If I survive this, then I am supposed to do something with my life,'" she says.
Hamilton decided then to devote herself to peace and inclusion. To develop her leadership skills, she participated in a local youth council and in a camp sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews, where she met young people from different backgrounds.
"I started learning about building relationships and peacebuilding at an early age," says Hamilton.
As she pursued a career in education and university administration, she promoted diversity: As dean of students at Occidental College in Los Angeles, she was charged with recruiting African American students, and at the National Education Association, she created a career development program for employees who felt stuck in lower-level positions.
After retiring from the NEA in 2012, Hamilton started Audacious Coaching, a consulting firm that helps organizations improve cross-cultural communication and foster inclusive workplaces.
Part of her mission is to make people aware of their prejudices. "Sometimes you’re not aware of your own biases, and you can do things that are stinging to others," she says. She became a Rotarian a year ago after learning about a water purification project that the Herndon club supports in Africa. Being part of Rotary meshes perfectly with her lifelong desire to promote peace and understanding. "When I saw what Rotary was doing with those kinds of service projects, I was hooked."


Monday 24 June 2019

Blanket Drive, President Jean's Induction and How One Thing leads to another.

Last Week
It was a Business Meeting and  I wasn't present but as it is the last Business Meeting of the Rotary Year I imagine it was an Old Board/New Board one.

David Bradshaw has asked for photographs of blanket distribution from the Rotary Blanket Drive.  I sent him some forwarded to me by the St Vincent de Paul Society of Mater Dolorosa Catholic Church in Kensington.  Here are some of them:


It is good to see that people sleeping in the street do have a blanket in this weather.  Apparently the average life of a blanket in these circumstances is very short, weeks rather than months, so it is so important to give them to homeless people.

This Week
It's Jean's re-Induction at Bryanston Country Club.  So far there will be 43 attending.  I think it's really great that she has opted to have a more casual lunchtime affair as she is President for two years in succession.  Don't end up at Wanderers by mistake!

Elias Thomas - Rotary Club of Sanford-Springvale, Maine

In 2012, Elias Thomas was in Rajasthan, India, visiting a site that two years before had been dusty and barren but now was lush and green. “Waterfowl had moved in to make it their habitat,” he recalls. “I heard engines pumping water up the hills to irrigate garden beds on terraces. As far as I could see, everything was green.” The transformation was the result of a catchment dam, which collects rainwater during the monsoon season and holds it in reserve for the dry season.
The dam had been built in 2010 by Thomas and other Rotarians from his club and the Rotary Club of Delhi Megapolis, with the support of a water conservation trust in India. It was the first of 10 such dams they have built together. “I first went to India in 2001 to participate in National Immunization Days. We thought the time would be more valuable if we incorporated a service project,” says Thomas.
A local rural development foundation identifies ideal locations near villages and farms where the dams can be built, taking advantage of dry riverbeds formed during previous monsoon seasons. “We dam it up and force it to create a reservoir — that’s a water catchment dam,” says Thomas, a past governor of District 7780 (parts of Maine and New Hampshire).
Local workers use machinery to dig huge trenches, and then the Rotarians spend four to five days building the foundation and walls by hand. Local laborers finish the project. The dams allow farmers to employ gravity-fed irrigation, help raise the water table, and recharge wells.
Last year, U.S. Senator Susan Collins of Maine recognized Thomas on the Senate floor, reading a tribute to his four decades of work as a Rotary volunteer. But he isn’t resting on his laurels; in February, he led a group of volunteers back to Rajasthan to build another dam.
This new dam will benefit more than 11,000 people. “Farmers can grow three crops instead of one. The first is for subsistence, the second will feed cattle, and the third can be sold,” Thomas says. “So what they make from selling the crop can be used to buy goods and services from others, and there’s a ripple effect.”


Tuesday 18 June 2019

65 Years Young, Discon & Polio Plus




The Rotary Club of Rosebank Johannesburg

65 Years Old Last Weekend

And a very social meeting it was last week.  

Discon


We had a good turn out at Discon despite our contingent never thinking they would get there.....just another two hours to go!

Les Gilets Jaunes

This is what Ann Hope-Bailie had to say about it:

I was quite apprehensive about attending my first Rotary District Conference – I needn’t have been at all!! It was great fun getting to know new Rotarians and hearing about Club projects etc. I came home so PROUD to be associated with Rotary. We had wonderful speakers such as Gift of the Givers – once you hear what they do and understand more of the logistics involved, it is mind boggling. One feels that we should be shouting from the roof tops more and not being silent on the good that is done by Rotary. They are already planning the next 2 Discons – hope I will be able to go….
Les Gilets Jaunes déguisé

Kevin Wolhuter is an old stager...he is also the District Treasurer so is there in a dual capacity:


This Discon was as always, well-organized and worthwhile. The surroundings were lovely and the speakers were very interesting and knowledgeable. The staff were super-efficient and obliging and the food was really good. There was a lot of camaraderie and interaction amongst the Rotarians and old friends had a good time catching up with each other. The Peace and Reconciliation breakaway was inspiring but unfortunately some of us had to leave early as we had to catch the bus back to our accommodation at Hermansdal. Staying so far away from the conference venue was a bit isolating even though the chalets we stayed in were lovely.               
Liz enjoyed the  Anne's breakaway where one of the speakers described her harrowing journey to the Arctic while a second speaker discussed the heartwarming work done by a shelter for abused women and children. All in all, a very successful Discon.
At the Teddybears' Picnic

Our Incoming President


This Week
It's a Business Meeting with the Board Meeting taking place beforehand....and this will affect us:

Rotary exchange rates

Please note: As of 1 July 2019, Rotary International exchange rates will be based on the prevailing market rate as of the first of each month. As a result, the future rates will no longer be publicized to Rotary members prior to the effective date. The change is the best way to ensure a true exchange rate to all our members worldwide. 
EVANSTON, Ill. (June 10, 2019) — Rotary is giving US$100 million in grants to support the global effort to end polio, a vaccine-preventable disease that once paralyzed hundreds of thousands of children each year.
The funding comes as Rotary and its partners in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) address the final—and most pressing—challenges to ending poliovirus transmission, and as Nigeria approaches three years without any reported cases of wild poliovirus, bringing the Africa region closer to polio-free status.
“We have the wild poliovirus cornered in the smallest geographic area in history, and now there are just two countries that continue to report cases of the wild virus,” said Michael K. McGovern, chair of Rotary’s International PolioPlus Committee. “As we work with our partners to apply innovative new strategies to reach more children, and embrace lessons learned thus far, Rotary is doubling down on our commitment to end polio for good. I’m optimistic that the end of polio is within our grasp, but we must remain vigilant in rallying global political and financial support as we push towards a polio-free world.”
While there were only 33 cases of wild poliovirus reported in 2018, the last mile of eradication has proven to be the most difficult. Barriers to eradication--like weak health systems, insecurity, and mobile and remote populations--must be overcome. As long as a single child has polio, all children are at risk, which underscores the need for continued funding and commitment to eradication.
To support polio eradication efforts in endemic countries, Rotary is allocating half the funds it announced today to: Afghanistan ($16.3 million), Nigeria ($10.2 million), and Pakistan ($25.2million). Additional funding will support efforts to keep vulnerable countries polio-free:
  • Chad ($102,395)
  • Democratic Republic of the Congo ($9.5 million)
  • Ethiopia ($2.6 million)
  • Iraq ($6 million)
  • Kenya ($6.3 million)
  • Mali ($1.2 million)
  • Somalia ($1.4 million)
  • South Sudan ($1.2 million)
  • Syria ($1.7 million)
  • Yemen ($2.1 million)
The World Health Organization (WHO) will receive $1.3 million to conduct
research, and will also receive support for surveillance activities in its Africa ($10.9 million) and Eastern Mediterranean ($4 million) Regions.
Rotary has committed to raising $50 million a year to be matched 2-to-1 by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, amounting to $150 million for polio eradication annually. 

Tuesday 11 June 2019

Ethiopia, Rotary Art Expo, Rotary International Convention and a Changing Rotary.

Last Week



David Bradshaw gave us his talk on Ethiopia.  It was very interesting and he obviously had a very enjoyable time. He talked about the size of the country and the need for a guide though a surprising number of people spoke English which helped.  Here he is delivering his talk in an unusually serious pose.  he brought  long his assistance, Marietjie, to show the pictures.


Rotary Art Expo
It seems to have been very successful.  David Bradshaw had his talk rather squeezed by a lot of discussion about the Art Expo which was almost all learning curve, putting out fires etc for the committee.  I also got the impression that it required much more work on their behalf than they anticipated and that should have been spread throughout the club more next year.
Congratulations to all of them.

We seem to have achieved a lot more publicity than in the past both on radio and in print.

Here's just one example:
.

One aspect of the Art Expo that tends to be forgotten are the many workshops in which the general public may participate.  Here's just one example:



Rotary Convention, Hamburg 
Last week The Ramble pictured Juanette McCrindle at the Convention promoting our club and our Cervical Cancer Project.  This is what she had to say about it in an email to the club:

I am happy to announce that I had three meetings with Bad Bedekese. And one in Helgoland. Then the conference. 
So at least 5 make ups and if we get more than one for the Convention please add them to the list.
There were so many interesting topics and stands it was overwhelming.  Listening to the Minister of Cooperation and Development talk about climate change, over population, ending polio and the importance of Rotary was interesting and at the same time really daunting. 
Rotaractors talking about how Rotary saved, changed and impacted their lives. One chap escaped the DRC and opened the first Rotaract Club in a refugee camp in Uganda.  Rotary saved one girl from going down the same path as her parents, drugs, alcohol and abuse.  
Rotary has impacted communities and individuals in significant ways and at these international conferences you feel the gratefulness of these people, you feel the inspiration and you are inspired. 
One break out session I chose to attend was that on the psychological impact on refugees... I could relate to this from two sides, a psychological side and as a new immigrant having stood in a queue with many refugees one morning from 02:00hrs, just to get a place in the queue that would allow you to be served.  The difference is I am privileged and most of the people in the queue are not. I have a support system, money, a home, transportation etc. 
The talk on cervical cancer was delivered by highly expert doctors and experienced practitioners in the field.  The statistics were mind blowing and it seems that the aim is to eradicate the HP Virus in the near future..through Rotary.
The Bill Gates Foundation has agreed to donate millions of US$ if the Rotary Foundation matches it.
I have met people from with different exhibits like the most simplistic water pump I have ever seen.. yet extremely effective.  
I have a sample of reusable sanitary pads (also a good project for our club). Healthy food, water filters, and so on and so on... 

In my limited experience it was one of the most invigorating conferences.  
Our going RI President Barry Rassin is a phenomenal leader and spoke extremely well.  Incoming RI President Mark Maloney is a highly qualified lawyer and seems to also be able to move a crowd as well, both men are movers and shakers and have the network to get things done. 
They both emphasized the importance of increasing female membership and if I am not wrong it is the first time that there are females on the board of directors and it is the first year that there is an overall increase of women in various positions within the various committees. They are  supported by strong partners. 
The opening and closing ceremonies were really fantastic, speeches were short and to the point, the entertainment was remarkable, yet not overbearing. All in all a great time. 
I have been fortunate to attend the RI Conventions in Los Angeles, Bangkok, Sydney, Seoul and Germany. Of them all, this one has touched me the most, perhaps that is a good thing considering this is the start of my life in Germany. 
The meetings and outings with the Bremen clubs were interesting and they made an incredible effort to make us feel welcome. 

Okay I have rambled enough, I hope you enjoyed my brief run down.

Thank you and best regards to all of you.

This Week
It's Discon, our District 9400 annual conference.  President Jean and a number of other Rotarians will be there so our usual Social Meeting is scheduled.


An extract from Rotary International General Secretary John Hewko's Report 

A Changing Rotary for a Changing World 

Rotary’s long-term membership strategy aims to attract a diverse set of new leaders who share our commitment and vision for creating lasting change while also making the club experience more engaging so even more of our current members stay. 
The first step to strengthening Rotary is to adapt to today’s realities and challenges, so we remain relevant to current and prospective members. 
Many clubs are implementing innovative ways to involve members and the community in Rotary. Whether they do it by creating new membership types, starting new clubs that accommodate busy schedules and different interests, or thoughtfully reexamining the style and frequency of their meetings, these clubs are discovering the value of changing to meet the diverse needs of today’s business, community, and civic leaders. To explore and find your own innovative solutions visit rotary.org/flexibility for examples, FAQ, and other resources. 
The manage membership leads program helps Rotarians connect with prospective members, relocating members, and those referred by current Rotarians. We received more than 15,000 membership inquiries this year, which resulted in about four new members joining Rotary each day.
 Small changes, big impact: The Rotary Club of Maidenhead Bridge in Berkshire, England, doubled its membership and engaged with the community by finding ways to welcome families and young professionals into the club’s activities. The club meets every two weeks at a coffee shop, and members are encouraged to bring their children. Club members also focus on service, logging almost 2,000 volunteer hours per year. In addition to bringing in new members, they are teaching future generations about the importance of volunteer service. 

Monday 3 June 2019

Rotary Art Expo, Ethiopia and an Amazing Young Persons Music Competition in the UK.

Last Week
It was a Social Meeting simply because of the opening of the Arts Festival the evening before.
Here is President Jean haranguing the mob and urging them to buy!

Members of our Interact Club at Highlands North were on hand to help and as always they were smart and polite.

It's a great pleasure having them there but we only have a picture of two of them as the others were busy handing out refreshments and helping generally.



At the opening a presentation was made to the winner of the GTC Portrait Award, Rika de Klerk. This has become an annual event.




The Leeuwkop Art Group with their mentor Rotarian Joan Sainsbury.  Portraits by them are on sale at the Rotary Art Expo and the money raised is for the benefit of those at Leeuwkop.


Rotary International Convention
It's underway in Hamburg and Juanette McCrindle is there promoting the Rotary Club of Rosebank and in particular our Cervical Cancer Project.  Here she is at the HEWRAG House of Friendship drumming up support for us.


This Week
Well, the Art Exhibition continues so everyone will be doing shifts at the Rosebank Mall but we do have a speaker.  One of our members, David Bradshaw, who is in the travel industry will be talking to us about his recent trip to Ethiopia.

There are a total of 9 UNESCO World Heritage attractions in Ethiopia, 8 cultural sites and one natural conservation area, the Simien National Park, home to a range of native endangered animals such as the Gelada baboon and the Ethiopian wolf. The most impressive Ethiopian World Heritage sites are scattered along the central length of the country, from the ancient ruins of Axum in the north to the Omo Valley archaeological sites in the south.





 A National Young Musicians Competition is organised each year by Rotary GBI.

The Rotary Young Musician competition provides a platform for young musical talent to shine.
The Mayor Of Chelmsford, Yvonne Spence, who is also a member of Rotary, opened this year’s national final.
She said: “I have been very proud to be a Rotarian as Mayor of Chelmsford.
“My duties have meant I have seen the full range of our youth activities within the community.
“The National Young Musician Final in Chelmsford was a real highlight of my year as I welcomed competitors their families and supporters from every part of Great Britain.
“Their talent and commitment was so impressive.”
In total, fifteen finalists battled it out all in hope for first place.
After introducing themselves, each participant gave a background to the piece they were performing.
James Devour, judge, said: “They were all excellent and it was a very hard decision.
“I was honoured to have judged this year’s competition.”
The Young Musician competition offers young people experience on stage, an opportunity to showcase their talent and the ability to receive feedback from experienced musicians.
Recognise Debbie Hodge?  See below.
Organiser Peter Dowse said: “The submissions once again were excellent and of a continuing higher standard.
“Thanks again to districts for endorsing this competition in your area – it is great to see the impact.
“This is my final year, and I have thoroughly enjoyed doing this coordination. It was a pleasure.”
District Governor Lesley Sulley and Rotary GBI President Debbie Hodge spoke to the friends and family of finalists whilst the contestants awaited the judge’s decisions.
All entrants were presented with a certificate and then Debbie handed out the trophies.