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 27 April 2020

A Business Meeting, Our Exchange Student, Masks , the Rotary Anns and what Rotary is doing in Great Britain & Ireland

Last Week

It was a Business  Meeting with over 30 on line but I wasn't there!  


Our Exchange Student, Masego Matiku, joined us on line from Thailand where she has been locked up with her family but she has been learning Thai and school opens at the end of the month.  She was upbeat and very happy.






As President Jean mentioned in her column last week, Jeannette Horner has been busy making masks for people in Alexandra.  They were given to Linda Twala for distribution...

I did attempt to straighten this but then half the people were cut out so you can either tilt your head or finish off your dwindling supply of whisky which will have the same affect.






A word from the Anns
Life under lock down has highlighted how important a part the whole fellowship aspect of Rotary is.
We have missed two monthly meetings. But thank goodness for the Rotary Anns’ chat group on
WhatsApp! We only got it going in 2020 and it has been most useful in this isolated time. We have
exchanged business news, but also shared some inspiring videos and writings. The next step is to
get going with Zoom as Rotary has.
Reluctantly we have cancelled the fundraising Bridge Drive scheduled for 13 May and in the true
spirit of Rotary most of the ‘tables’ have opted to donate the money they had paid to book, to
charity. So some of the money will go to the Animal Shelter in Soweto but some will go to hunger
relief in this very fraught time among the poor and unemployed.
To any Rotarians who had planned to donate prizes for the Bridge Drive, thank you for your
generosity. Perhaps next year. .. . ..
To any who are reading this we send love and best wishes for your safety and good health as we
adjust to all the changes that will need to be made to the new ‘normal’.

Discon 2020
As you will all have been informed, Discon will be on line this year and all information for participation will be sent from District in due course.

This Week
It's a Public Holiday so officially we don't have a meeting.  However the Good Friday unofficial meeting was so well attended which shows that continuing contact is important so I am sure President Jean will organise a social meeting again.

Here's an interesting article on what Rotary Clubs in Great Britain and Ireland are doing during the Corona Virus Pandemic


Rotary clubs across Great Britain & Ireland have stepped up to the plate during the current pandemic.
More than 50 different community activities are up and running to support those most vulnerable – and they are the ones which Rotary GB&I knows about.
https://twitter.com/RotaryGBI/status/1245625949795713025
In Hertfordshire, Ware Rotary took just 12 days to set up the Bricket Wood Rotary Community Corps. Immediate Past Rotary GB&I President, Debbie Hodge, has been instrumental in setting up the group.
“We had noticed that there were people asking what could they do to help in light of the Covid-19 pandemic,” explained Debbie. “And this was before the call for volunteers by the NHS and the government.
“In my village, I help run the Mums and Toddler group along with the local vicar Kylie Hodgins. The village has a well-used Facebook page, an active Neighbour Watch and a lively Residents Association.
“In the time before social distancing – although mindful not to get too close – we had a meeting and agreed that we needed a volunteer group, a mechanism for getting the message out that support was there and a way of providing some governance and safe working practices.
“The Facebook page generated the volunteers, a poster and leaflet were agreed giving a dedicated e mail and phone number and a Rotary Community Corps gave us the structure and governance.”
Rotary Ware agreed to become the sponsor club and now, in less than a fortnight, they have 23 volunteers.
They comprise a variety of skills ranging from compliance, financial management, languages other than English, audit and project management, dog walking and boarding, teaching, a police officer and two surveyors.
We had noticed that there were people asking what could they do to help in light of the Covid-19 pandemic,”
Debbie said that the group has sorted out paper delivers to those out of the delivery area, hospital transport, food deliveries, collection and delivery of food orders, collection and posting of parcels, and the collection and delivery of prescriptions form the local pharmacy.
“This safety net for the village is working on many levels,” she explained.
“It is giving those who want to help a platform to do that and helping their sense of worth, for those in need a mechanism to get help and the comfort of knowing that there is help locally, and for the whole village a feeling of being cared for.
“We may not have many calls for our services but we have already to made a difference, and by working together and caring for each other we will continue to support those in the village.”


In County Kildaire, Ireland, Newbridge Rotary has established a volunteer group within the club to deliver prescription medicine to the elderly and those who cannot visit the pharmacy.
In consultation with the local Gardai, the club has written to all pharmacies in the town letting them know of the group.
Wearing personal protective equipment, the Rotarians collect the medicine from the pharmacy, which they deliver to those in need.
The club has also bought a dedicated mobile phone, whose number has been shared with the Gardai and local authority in case they need the Rotarians’ help urgently.


Also in Ireland, in Tullamore, County Offaly, President Frank Kelly reports that they are “healthy and in high spirits”.
He said: “We’re in the happy position to have a lot of members who are connected with Tullamore Hospital, Offaly County Council, local radio and many charitable organisations.”
Frank explained that they were working together to provide help in Tullamore through daily updates and appeals via their WhatsApp group.
We’re in the happy position to have a lot of members who are connected with Tullamore Hospital, Offaly County Council, local radio and many charitable organisations.”
They were involved with food collection and delivery for the needy in association with the An Gárda Síochána network.
Using the club’s contacts, they were able to distribute hand sanitiser and protective healthcare gear, while distributing money to an ongoing fund to provide food parcels for needy or isolated families and individuals.



Richard Hughes from Llandeilo Rotary Club in Carmarthenshire
Elsewhere, scores of Rotary clubs are also making direct donations to food banks, sharing the money they would have paid from their weekly meetings. The Trussell Trust is one of the chief beneficiaries.
Richard Hughes from Llandeilo Rotary Club in Carmarthenshire, West Wales, and who lives in a village called Talley, has set up a community group in his village called Talley United.
The 68-year-old, who retired from working at the Port Talbot Steelworks, admitted a challenge for him during this crisis is to look after his wife, who has had cancer three times, and is currently in remission.
“This damages her immune system, and therefore isolation is important,” he said.
Talley United is a group of people who get out in the community to do the shopping and collect prescriptions for the vulnerable. Richard tends to get to his local shop, which is seven miles away, for just after 7am.


Also in Wales, Rotarians are the Cardiff East club have stepped up their work with their local foodbank during this crisis.
Club President, Paul Cotter, explained that their partnership with the foodbank stretches back a few years. “I have been a volunteer for a while,” he said.
“We have had the foodbank come to our club to talk about the work they do, and the contribution they make to other people’s lives in the local community.
“Previously, many of us as individuals had been making contributions to the foodbank separately, or through their local churches.
We have had the foodbank come to our club to talk about the work they do, and the contribution they make to other people’s lives in the local community.”
“Last year, Cardiff East Rotary decided to make the foodbank as a club project. The club makes a food donation once a month – we call it ‘Pudding Wednesday’. We make both financial and food donations to the food bank.
“During the recent floods, Cardiff Foodbank helped by taking donations to the valley communities who had been hit hardest by the storms. They will need further donations during the coronavirus outbreak.”


Rotary clubs assisting with coronavirus outbreak
Silloth – Packing and distributing essential support parcels including food, hygiene items, puzzle books and more. Take a look at the full story here.
Maidenhead Bridge – Launched an appeal for local volunteers willing to collect shopping, prescriptions, walk dogs, post mail and more. Also helping those families on free school meals. So far have supported 54 local people and had support from 61 volunteers. For more information on how to volunteer visit their website.
Sale – Community support scheme is ensuring that elderly residents have been able to get to the shops for shopping as well as essential doctor and hospital appointments. They have been working in collaboration with local taxi operators, Scotts Cars, to subsidise costs so that those in need can travel free of charge.
St Neots St Marys – Sponsored the printing of 10,000 postcards, where people who are able to help those self-isolating can fill in their details and distribute them locally.
Ribbleside – have purchased hundreds of pounds worth of supermarket gift cards, which volunteers are then using to purchase supplies for those who need it, meaning no money is changing hands making the process more hygienic.
Limerick Thomond – been supporting a ‘Meals on Wheels’ scheme by donating dinner boxes to St. Munchin’s Community Centre, a local not-for-profit organisation who have seen increased demand since the outbreak.
Leatherhead – compiled a list of local businesses who are operating during the outbreak and providing important services such as food, drink and health care delivery while also highlighting those offering a discount to NHS workers.
Crewkerne and District – made two donations totalling £2,500 to a local foodbank and also the Citizen’s Advice Bureau.
In Reading – Eight Rotary clubs in the town are working together in similar fashion collecting prescriptions, fetching urgent supplies, posting mail, dog walking and providing a friendly phone call to those who are self-isolating. Also encouraging children to write letters to nursing homes or to an elderly neighbour.
Lytham – Volunteering as part of a local coalition of organisations and businesses to offer assistance with urgent supplies, shopping, dog walking, phone calls etc.
Gordano Breakfast – members have donated their usual breakfast meeting meal to Clevedon District Foodbank who are experiencing shortages.
Tonbridge – donated £500 to the food charity, Families Eating and Sharing Together (FEAST), which helps families unable to obtain free school meals.
Sittingbourne Invicta – donated £1,000 to Swale Foodbank
Bradford West – supporting Bradford Metropolitan Foodbank to supply dependent families. Club is using social media to provide a regular list of wanted items.
Kings Hill and Sittingbourne Invicta – opening their community funds for applications for funds from small clubs and groups
Maidstone Dawn Patrol – have been taking regular exercise litter-picking whilst maintaining social distancing during the coronavirus outbreak.
Romney Marsh – been involved in setting up of the Romney Marsh Support Hub. The group includes a number of charities, including foodbanks, as well as local church leaders, Kent Police, councils, doctors’ surgeries, scout groups and community wardens. The aim of the Hub is to ensure there is a consistent and factually correct message going out to the public and avoid duplication of effort
Shrewsbury Severn – donate £500 to a local primary school which is open to children of key workers.
Chippenham – providing urgent supplies to those self-isolating, including packing and distributing food parcels in collaboration with local supermarkets, supplying fresh fruit and veg, bread and tinned goods.
Normanton – donation to The Well Project which provides positive activities for the community to engage with, including a foodbank and youth club.
Epworth & Isle of Axholme – part of a ‘Good Neighbours’ scheme, a partnership between voluntary and trad organisations which has fed 16 families, including 27 adults and 37 children.
Glenrothes – Handing out leaflets on behalf of a local community centre who are assisting residents during the outbreak.
Eckington & District – club member Philip Staton is volunteering with the local Age UK group to deliver food parcels to those in need.
Llandeilo – Club member Richard Hughes is hosting a weekly online ‘pub quiz’ as well as supporting residents in the village of Talley by purchasing food and prescriptions.
Fareham Meon – purchased a library trolley so books for a local care home could be easily transported around the building for residents confined to their rooms. Club is also directing funds to a local foodbank, totalling £1,000 so far. Also donated £700 to a village in Australia which was recently hit by wildfires and now coronavirus.
Sheffield – club members have signed up for the NHS volunteer scheme, with one member Mark Casson already cycling around the city to deliver medicine to the vulnerable.
Wymondham – members are involved in delivering a volunteer scheme supporting the village’s 550 residents, many of them elderly, offering practical help from food delivery to chats on the phone.
Ipswich – Rotary member John Skeates has created a neighbourhood WhatsApp group for local residents to talk, answer eachother’s questions and request support. Over 90 people are now connected so far.
In Kettering – members are maintaining contact with visitors to their regular dementia café as well as working with the Salvation Army and Sikh Gurdwara to distribute available food from a local Tesco store.
In East Midlands – planning a significant, long-term food bank support project which includes financial and practical assistance for the network of food banks in the region.
Ellon – donated £2,000 worth of supermarket gift cards to Ellon Food Bank which they said would be life-saving. The money was raised through community fundraising activities earlier in the year.
Louth – funding to several local groups to help some of our most vulnerable people and has already given out more than £3000. Also has assisted in supplying laptops to children having to self-isolate in the early days of the outbreak to continue their education.
Ware – Community Corps – Rotary has helped coordinate 23 volunteers, all with different skills, from compliance to foreign language speakers, to form a Rotary Community Corps. So far the group has delivered newspapers and food, assisted with hospital transport and more. It has been a comforting safety net for local people in need.
Morriston – have created an online Zoom meeting place at 19.00 every evening for one hour inviting Rotarians and the local community to chat, share ideas, identify vulnerable people, signpost and just be a point of contact for those who feel lonely.
Aberystwyth – Made a donation of £795 to the Jubilee Storehouse Foodbank, with club members giving the money they would have otherwise spent on their mean at their regular club meeting.
Cheadle & District – Prior to the widespread closure of shops and restaurants, Rotary member Deborah Puttick collected and safely distributed fresh fruit to regular visitors to the club’s dementia café. The fruit would otherwise have been discarded by a local juice bar.
Mendip – Members of the Club are helping to answer the telephones for the newly formed Cheddar Valley Community hub. Formed by local business people to assist the vulnerable who are self-isolating to get vital supplies. Younger volunteers will then go to get the supplies.
Hamble Valley – Part of coordinated efforts in the area, alongside other community groups and religious organisations. They are sharing key messages about social distancing, registering people as vulnerable and promoting the NHS volunteer scheme.
Barry – £700 donation to Vale Foodbank
Blyth – It was an early start for Rotary volunteers in Blyth who helped transport food from a local supermarket to the nearby foodbank.
Nottingham – Seeking daily volunteers to support Sycamore Dining, a charity which makes affordable meals for those living independently. Daily deliveries of hot meals to elderly and vulnerable in the community are essential.
Thornbury – £500 donation to North Bristol Foodbank
Burford and Kingham – £622 donation to North Cotswold Foodbank
Sussex Vale – Made a £585 donation to local foodbanks and plan to continue donating food and funds throughout the coronavirus crisis.
Colchester – The club’s Easter Egg Raffle has taken place online this year, and the club has also donated a number of large eggs to the Rainbow Trust, which supports terminally ill children and their families.
Barnstable Link – Organising a ‘Children’s Art Challenge’ for pupils to take part in during the month of April while they’re unable to attend school. It’s a chance for children to get creative with any medium and be in with a chance of winning a prize!
Hounslow – Donating food parcels and groceries to the staff at West Middlesex Hospital, as well as supporting the local foodbanks and the Hounslow Open Kitchen which provides free meals to the needy 3 times a day.

Monday 20 April 2020

Pandemic Life, a Chapter of Accidents, a Business Meeting and Rotary & Coronavirus

Pandemic Life

The Ramble stopped, effectively for two weeks, as we had a social meeting and a Business Meeting on Zoom followed by a Public Holiday on Good Friday. Subsequently we had a Speaker Meeting on Zoom last week and we had a couple of visitors on Zoom so we have decided to start up The Ramble again...now we have something to say.....and to include visitors and potential members on Zoom on a permanent basis so that when we go back to our normal meetings on a Friday they will automatically be streamed.  If you wish to participate email President Jean jeaneb59@icloud.com and she will send you the Zoom link.

Last Week



Our speaker was Lois Wagner who spoke on an amazing chapter of accidents she has experienced on her travels, some of them amusing and some of them life-threatening.  It hasn't stopped her traveling...not at the moment, of course...and I am sure it won't stop her having accidents either.  As you can see she does get to some obscure places such as Nepal.




Despite her calamities and a horrible experience in Cape Town she remains upbeat and showed us a little chart of her philosophy of life.


We were joined by a former member of our club, Lorenzo in Italy and one of our regular visitors, Nigel in Botswana.  You will also notice some of our members using aliases such as 'User' and 'Donatella'.




I have deleted the items from the Diary that are definitely not taking place and will adjust the others as we go along.

I also thought that this chart of funders of the World Health Organisation is particularly interesting.








This Week
It's a Business Meeting following the Board Meeting on Monday.


As the COVID-19 pandemic spreads uncertainty and hardship around the world, Rotary members and participants are innovating, caring for those affected, and showing that even at a distance, there are ways to help.
As people of action, Rotary members are engaged in their communities — gathering for projects and offering help to those in need. But in many areas, life is changing drastically. Health experts are urging people to maintain distance from others or even isolate themselves in order to slow the spread of the highly contagious virus. 
Fighting disease is one of Rotary’s main causes, so members already support efforts to promote proper hand washing techniques, teach people other ways to stay healthy, and supply training and vital medical equipment to health care providers. Now they’re helping health authorities communicate lifesaving information about COVID-19 and donating protective gear and other supplies to clinics and hospitals that are under strain because of the pandemic. 

These are just some of the ways that members are supporting their communities right now:

  • In Italy, one of the countries that has been affected most, clubs in District 2080 are raising funds to purchase ventilators and protective gear for overstretched hospitals. And when the worst of the outbreak was raging in China, the district’s clubs raised more than $21,000 for protective masks to prevent spread of the disease there. 
  • Clubs in District 2041, also in Italy, raised funds online to buy protective gear for health workers who will care for COVID-19 patients at a 400-bed hospital being built at Milan’s fairgrounds. 
  • In Hong Kong, Rotary clubs have raised funds, packed medical supplies, and visited public housing to distribute masks and sanitizers. 
  • Rotary clubs in Sri Lanka installed thermometers in airport bathrooms and produced posters to raise awareness about the coronavirus for schools across the country. 
  • The Rotary Club of Karachi Darakhshan, Sind, Pakistan, distributed thousands of masks to people in Karachi. 
  • Clubs in District 3700 (Korea) have donated $155,000 to the Red Cross. 
  • Rotary clubs in Nigeria’s Akwa Ibom state conducted a campaign to raise awareness about the threat of the virus. Members shared information about the illness and how to keep safe at two schools and distributed materials about using good hygiene to stay healthy. 
  • The Rotary club of Metro Bethesda, Maryland, USA, is contacting neighbors who live alone and are quarantined. Volunteers are asked to contact at least five of those people each week to ask how they are and if they need anything. Members are also leaving flowers on their doorsteps. 

Using technology to address the crisis

  • Although clubs and districts are canceling or postponing their in-person meetings and events, they are still finding ways to keep up their fellowship, reimagine their service efforts and respond to the pandemic: 
  • The Rotary E-Club of Fenice del Tronto invited the public to its 11 March online meeting to raise awareness about the coronavirus. A virologist spoke about the virus, how it spreads, and how to keep safe. 
  • The Rotary Club of Singapore hosted a webinar in which an epidemiologist and an infectious disease expert addressed questions and concerns about the coronavirus and the pandemic. 
  • The Rotary Club of East Jefferson County, Washington, USA, used crowdsourcing to create an online listing of area grocery stores, pharmacies, and restaurants that offer home delivery. 
  • Rotary members in Hereford, England, created a Facebook group for Rotary members and others to use to link people who need support with people or organizations that can help. More than 6,900 people have joined the group since it was started 14 March. 
  • Two days before its annual fundraiser, the Rotary Club of Schaumburg-Hoffman Estates, Illinois, USA, moved the event to Facebook. It auctioned more than 100 items and raised more than $100,000, about the same amount as in previous years. Food set to feed 350 people at the event was delivered to those in need. 
  • The Rotary E-Club of Silicon Valley, California, USA, held an online meeting for members of other clubs to share advice on using digital tools to remain connected. The club recorded the meeting so members could watch it later and share it with others. 
  • Rotary clubs in Zone 34 (Georgia and Florida, USA, and the Caribbean) created a guide to help members stay connected online. The Rotary E-Club of the Caribbean 7020 is helping clubs in the zone arrange online meetings.

Monday 16 March 2020

Professor Shelley Schmollgruber and the Value of the Lester Connock Awards and a Social Meeting this week. Rotary and COVID-19.

Last Week

Professor Shelley Schmollgruber spoke on what the recipients of the Lester Connock Award had achieved as a result of receiving it.  In other words that we would see the value of what we do as a club in providing this bursary for post graduate nurses at Wits.  So seldom do we really get feed-back so it was a real pleasure to hear what she had to say.  Rather than attempt to summarise it I have created a page.  See Lester Connock Awards above.
I don't think any of us realised the value of our contribution but it's not really about money, working with Shelley has meant that we have ensured that the research has not only contributed in terms of Rotary ideals but that it has been of value for nursing practise and not just a topic that has been chosen by the student just to get a Masters Degree.


Visitors 

 Uma Chandrasekaran of the Rotary Club of Vellore Angels exchanged banners with President Jean.  She was accompanied by her daughter, Mathangi Vellore who is living in Johannesburg.

Vellore is a city and the administrative headquarters of Vellore district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. It is located on the banks of the Palar River in the northeastern part of Tamil Nadu and is separated into four zones that are further subdivided into 60 wards, covering an area of 87.915 km2 and housing a population of 423,425 as reported by the 2001 census.
 It is located about 101 kilometres (63 mi) west of Chennai, and about 200 kilometres (124 mi) east of Bangalore. Vellore is governed under a mayor and the Vellore Municipal Corporation. It is a part of both the Lok Sabha and state assembly constituencies of Vellore.






















Vellore is the home to Christian Medical College & Hospital and the Vellore Institute of Technology.

The Vellore area is the largest exporter of finished leather goods in the country. Leather exports from Vellore account for more than 37% of India’s leather exports and leather-related products. 
Chrispin Matthieu, a potential member,
 also visited us.


This Week
It's a social meeting.  Once a month we get the chance to move around and chat to each other as well as tell the most appalling jokes.  It's also gives us the opportunity to chat to any visitors about what our club actually does...... other tan talk to each other and tell appalling jokes!

Progressive Lunch, Saturday.  Twenty of us are going so read all about it next week.



Don't forget our Bric-a-Brac Stall at the Irish Club next month and Support the Anns Bridge Drive with Prizes in May.


COVID-19....Yes Minister:




Rotary is closely monitoring the pandemic of COVID-19, the illness caused by the novel coronavirus, and continuously assessing the potential impact on Rotary operations, events, and members.

Your health and safety are always our top priorities. Look below for information on Rotary activities that may be affected. We will update this announcement when new information becomes available.

Rotary International Convention

The convention is still scheduled for 6-10 June in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA. 
We will watch for developments and follow the recommendations and guidance of the World Health Organization (WHO), the U.S. State Department, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. We are prepared to make adjustments and take all precautions necessary to protect convention attendees.

Other major Rotary events

To protect the health of our members, staff, and travelers, Rotary has canceled the presidential conferences scheduled for 28 March at UNESCO in Paris, France, and for 9 May at the Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome, Italy. People who registered will receive an email with additional information and details about refunds. 

Club and district meetings

Rotary International recommends that members and participants follow the guidelines set by the World Health Organization and your national, regional, or local health authorities to protect your health and safety. If authorities recommend it, postpone or cancel in-person meetings, or conduct them online or by phone.
Closely examine your personal circumstances, including any health issues, when you consider travel and participation in events.

Rotary Youth Exchange

Contact your partner district in areas where COVID-19 has been detected to confirm specific precautions that students hosted in their area should take. All districts, as well as students and their parents, should look at the guidelines issued by their embassies or consular offices, international public health agencies like the World Health Organization, and local health authorities for the latest and most relevant information. 
If your district is a host district, consider whether student trips or local activities could expose participants to an increased risk or to challenges returning home. You may consider canceling or postponing nonessential travel.
If a student’s parent or guardian is concerned about their health or safety in any placement, including in those areas affected by an outbreak, work with your partner districts to consider an alternative placement, if possible. Parents may also choose to remove their child from the program. 

Rotary Peace Fellowships and other programmes

 Participants in Rotary Peace Fellowships, Rotary Friendship Exchanges, and Rotary Action Groups and their affiliated chapters should follow recommendations from the World Health Organization and the host region’s national, regional, or local health authorities when considering whether to postpone events, meetings, or activities. 
For peace fellows: Countries listed as Level 3 by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have been added to Rotary’s travel ban list, and all nonessential travel to, from, or through those countries is restricted for Rotary staff and fellows. Use discretion if you plan to travel to or through Level 2 countries. Fellows currently in a country experiencing the spread of COVID-19 are advised to follow the recommendations of your host university and the country’s national health agencies. 
For first-year fellows preparing for your applied field experience, we recommend you consider options in your study country and have an alternate plan in place in case travel is restricted further. Beyond health and safety concerns, we do not want fellows to be subject to quarantines or have challenges returning to the country where you study because of your field experience travel. You can contact your staff specialist with specific questions about how Rotary’s policy may affect your field experience planning.
For Interact and Rotary Youth Leadership Awards (RYLA): Consider whether planned events, trips, or local activities could expose young people to an increased risk, and consider canceling or postponing nonessential travel or large gatherings. 
Follow the guidance of schools for any closures or delayed start times that may affect school-based program participants. Discuss how they can stay engaged and safe until school resumes. Talk with parents or guardians about their child’s health and safety and what Rotary clubs and districts are doing to minimize the exposure and impact for participants in Rotary activities and events. 

Rotary-funded travel

Rotary International recommends that Rotary-funded grant recipients, Rotary Youth Exchange participants, Rotary Peace Fellows, or other Rotary-funded travelers follow the guidelines set by the World Health Organization and your national, regional, or local health authorities to protect your health and safety. 
Review and share the Rotary travel ban list with clubs and districts to confirm whether grant-funded travel is permitted. Direct any additional questions about Rotary-funded travel to your appropriate program officer.

Monday 9 March 2020

Richard Tonkin, Careers Day, Professor Shelley Schmollgruber & Books

Last Week 


Stewart Mutokonyo of Lambano
Richard Tonkin took us on a journey through part of his life.  I am not going to repeat it here for obvious reasons only to say that he moved 22 times in his first 21 years.  He has turned out remarkably well.
Ellen Spencer of Naledi Projects and
President of the Rotary Club of Luxembourg Hearts
We also had two visitors, Stewart Mutukonyo of Lambano Childs Hospice who brought Ellen Spencer, President of the Rotary Club of Luxembourg Hearts.  She is visting on behalf of Naledi Projects in Luxembourg who have a longstanding relationship with Lambano and are financing the building of the new hospice.

Rotary Careers Day
I really was worried that Careers Day would be a disaster right up until 09:30 on the day.  We were uncertain as to attendance by learners and when I arrived at 08:30 only one tertiary institution had arrived and about the same number of career representatives....and very few learners!  Some didn't turn up in both categories and some were very late but it came right in the end despite us not having the number of learners that have we had in the past.
I will be forming a committee after Easter to look at next year and work out a much bigger spread of vocations.  Contacting the schools has always been done by Holy Family College and I have told them that Rotary will be responsible for that in future.  If you are interested in joining the committee please let me know.  It will include appropriate non Rotarians.

Jean mentioned the hand washing....not of Careers Day, we are not washing our hands of that!
Thank you those who sent photographs.  I will put a few here but will open a Page and put the rest there.

IT

Entrepreneurship
































This Week
Professor Shelley Schmollgruber is going to tell us about the value of our Lester Connock Awards to Post Graduate Nurses, the affect it has had, and what they have achieved as a result.

Her main interests are in intensive and critical care nursing.  Her critical care interests encompass the development of evidence-based competencies, and ethical and legal issues in intensive care nursing. The topic of Shelley's master's research was "Support needs of culturally diverse families of adult intensive care patients". She is currently undertaking doctoral research in patient acuity levels in Intensive Care - the title of her doctoral thesis is "Developing and application of competency standards for Intensive Care Nursing practice". Shelley is a senior lecturer in the Department of Nursing Education, and is responsible for the teaching, the clinical accompaniment and research supervision of Intensive Care students in the Masters and Advanced Nursing Diploma programmes. Her extensive experience in the academic setting has afforded her a strong base from which to proceed into nursing education. She is current council member (ex officio) of the Critical Care Society of Southern Africa, and represents the Society on the council of the World Federation of Critical Care Nursing (WFCCN). In 2014 she has been elected as an Honorary World Ambassador of the WFCCN. Shelley is a member of Sigma Theta Tau International for Nurses.
Books are very important in my family's life so this article from The Rotarian is here just for personal reasons.
    While you’re holding a book,
                                        the book is holding you
by 

The image looks like a million other family travel photos: two adults and a 10-year-old at a historic destination — in this case England’s Greenwich Observatory, the place where you could say time starts. But on close examination, the picture has a fourth element: a just-published Harry Potter novel, as big as the 10-year-old is small. Holding his place, the kid’s finger has disappeared into the book, and from the expression on his face, so has he.
We may have been in Greenwich, but my son was at Hogwarts.
A long time before, when I was about his size, I had torn through Treasure Island, dealing with words I didn’t recognize by either skipping over them or trying to sound them out, producing outlandish internal pronunciations that fortunately nobody ever heard. A bit later, I flung myself at James Michener’s Potter-weight Hawaii, with passages I still remember more sharply than things I read last week.
But in the years since Greenwich Mean Time became the standard measure of the moment, technology has surged past the binding together of printed pages. Information now moves with the form and speed of electronic impulses. Yet books persist, much like that kid refusing to be budged from the world his imagination has conjured. “Every time there is a new innovation, they predict the death of the book,” Michael Herrmann, the owner of Gibson’s Bookstore in Concord, New Hampshire, said recently. “But the book is a perfect technology. Like the shark, it hasn’t changed and continues to thrive.”
The newest challenges to the printed book range from 500 channels of television and the boundless resources of the internet to the small plastic devices, the weight and thickness of a slice of pizza, that can display multiple volumes. The threats at one time appeared lethal: In the first decade of this century, the number of U.S. bookstores, both chain and independent, dropped sharply. All over America, bookstores were closing down, their spaces turning into nail salons and hot yoga studios.
But over the past decade, the number of independent bookstores across the country has rebounded — shooting up from 1,651 to 2,524, with sales rising steadily. This resurgence is not about “information,” or what the tech folks call “content.” It’s about actual books, ink on paper, that not only send words out but pull people in. Bookstores are drawing people back to the comfort of print.
In 2012, best-selling author Ann Patchett wrote in the Atlantic: “You may have heard the news that the independent bookstore is dead, that books are dead, that maybe even reading is dead — to which I say: Pull up a chair, friend. I have a story to tell.” Her story is that when the last independent new-book store in her hometown of Nashville, Tennessee, closed, Patchett — explaining that she didn’t want to live in a town without a bookstore — joined with a couple of friends to open her own. With the help of some of her writer friends doing readings, Parnassus Books has been a dramatic success. “People still want books,” she declared. “I’ve got the numbers to prove it.”
In the summer of 2019, Patchett got still more proof of that: Amazon announced that it would open up its own bookstore across the street from Parnassus.
In Portland, Oregon, a place named Powell’s City of Books covers an entire city block and rises three stories; it is not so much a bookstore as a neighborhood. People go to Powell’s for diversion as much as for commerce, stopping in when they have a spare hour downtown or showing it off to out-of-town visitors. Powell’s is a social location, a place of first dates that never have to worry about running out of words.
The lure is not only being surrounded by books, but also being insulated by them. People have a persistent interest in reading books, but they also like to talk about books, and to people who spend a lot of time around books. As Eric Ackland, proprietor of the new and booming Amazing Books and Records in Pittsburgh, told the New York Times last summer, “A bookstore clerk or owner is inevitably something of a therapist.”
Like many people, I often go to Powell’s for no particular reason, only to leave laden with purchases that an hour earlier I didn’t know I needed. That kind of thing happens in bookshops; it’s less frequent (for me, at any rate) in hardware stores.
With a physical book, you can easily leaf back a few chapters to remind yourself who a character is, and didn’t she move to Chicago in Chapter 6? You can peek at the last page to make sure things end happily. You can write nasty comments in the margin, although libraries — and, to some degree, authors — really wish you wouldn’t. Those things can be done on an iPad, but somehow the experience is not the same. “People spend so much time in front of a screen, they want to do something else,” suggests Oren Teicher, recently retired CEO of the American Booksellers Association. “There is a very strong case to be made that reading a physical book is a fundamentally different experience from reading on a screen.”
In 2019, the Hechinger Institute reported that, according to an analysis of 29 studies, students retained more from print than from screens, although the exact reason wasn’t clear. Distraction? Eye movement? Deep brain function? My theory is based on the power of physical connection: While you’re holding a book, the book is also holding you. It’s the same reason that a kiss is better than a romantic movie. (Admittedly, I read about the survey on a screen.)
You can’t exactly say books are beating back technology; people still stare obsessively at their cellphones as well as their 55-inch television screens. But books are holding their own, in bookstores as well as on nightstands. Those may in fact be the strongest redoubts of books, piled there to accompany people into sleep and to be ready when sleepers awake in the darkness from unnerving dreams.
Books are a comfort at such times, but as a perfect (and portable) technology, they also can accompany you into other unsettling circumstances. I once brought a book to a biopsy, focusing on each line as small bits of me were being harvested. The doctor, somewhat taken aback, remarked that it must be quite a book. Actually, it was, but just by being a book, it was providing something I could never get from a podcast. Words on a page, carefully arranged to reach out to you, can distract you more thoroughly than voices in your head. You can listen to a podcast while driving, but it’s a bad idea to try to read a book.
An estimated 5 million Americans meet regularly in book groups, as opposed to gathering for appliance critiques or in vodka tasting clubs, because talking about books is a way to talk about your life, in a sense that talking about Instagram simply isn’t. Books have the power to bring people together.
Recently, dropping off a rental car at the Los Angeles airport, I got into a conversation with the 20-something rental agent about a scratch on the rear bumper — and I want to make this clear, I hit nothing; the scratch must have been there before. It seemed to me that the agent was leaning in a little close to me and my carry-on bag. Not seeking conflict, but feeling that the situation required some assertiveness, I asked her if there was a problem.
“Oh,” she said. “I just wanted to see what you were reading.”

Monday 2 March 2020

A Business Meeting, Pat Dalziel, Anns' Bridge Drive, a Progressive Lunch, Richard Tonkin bares all and Family Membership of Rotary?

Last Week
It was a Business Meeting but with fewer members than usual owing to three funerals and none of them Rotarians!
There was an interesting  report back on preparations for the Arts Festival.....including a name change to Art Expo and a new logotype which will appear in here in due course.  Congratulations to Roger Lloyd and his committee for reinventing the event and for the success they are having with three months to go.



Rabson Banda
Selwyn Kossuth and Mark Franklin
We welcomed two visitors, Rabson Banda, a Rotaractor from Nairobi, Kenya and Selwyn Kossuth from the Rotary Club of Mississauga, Canada







Rotary Africa - Rotary Ann Pat Dalziel's 100th Birthday
The latest issue of Rotary Africa has a very interesting article about Pat Dalziel.

Rotary Anns' Bridge Drive 13th May.


They have appealed to us to supply prizes for this and I know that some Rotarians also participate in the Bridge Drive.  Wine or chocolates seem to be the most popular prizes. 
The Anns always help us with the Art Expo and we always help out with the Bridge Drive.  Prizes can be given to Les Short at a Rotary Meeting.




Progressive Lunch Saturday 21st March
If you are going just be in touch with Pam Donaldson as soon as possible.

This Week
Richard Tonkin is going to reveal all!.....and we will picture it in The Ramble, a world scoop!


A family affair; Rotary Club of Tagbilaran, Philippines

Chartered: 1970
Original membership: 25
Membership: 44
Share alike: The seaside city of Tagbilaran on the island of Bohol attracts scuba divers entranced by stunning coral reefs; on land, sun-seeking tourists tramp in the shadows of the otherworldly conical humps known as the Chocolate Hills. The Rotary Club of Tagbilaran meets needs in the city and the agricultural and mining-centred areas beyond.

Club innovation: Many residents of Tagbilaran who might want to join Rotary found the cost and time commitment prohibitive. To attract them, the club allowed shared memberships between family members. 

Victor Bantol is a “strong believer in the good works of Rotary,” he says. Yet he was a reluctant joiner, to hear his wife, “Baby” Louella Bantol, tell it. In 1998, she says, Victor was required to join by his then-boss, a member of a club on Mindanao island. Victor’s membership led to Louella’s involvement, because his job as an engineer entailed travel to manage a mine on another island. “In my husband’s absence, he always asked me to represent him at the club meetings and project implementations,” Louella says. “I came to love Rotary.” She joined and eventually served as club president and assistant governor in District 3860.
Victor was impressed — and inspired. “I supported her in all activities,” he says. “I was changed and I became a very active member.” The couple’s example led the club to embrace shared family memberships as a way to involve family members. The cost of Rotary membership is a barrier for many Filipinos, says Irena Heberer, club president. Prospective members whose spouses were already Rotarians often said, “We cannot pay for one more,” Heberer says. Under the club’s new policy, a family pays for only one membership.
The Bantols became active recruiters for the club. “We invited our friends to our club meetings,” Victor says. “We showed them our projects and let them feel the importance of sharing resources with our marginalised brethren. Many became members and later became reliable club officers.”
When a 7.1 magnitude earthquake struck Bohol in October 2013, Rotarians were on the front lines. Victor Bantol led a team conducting rescue and recovery operations, an arduous and heartbreaking task. The Rotarians also cleared paths and repaired a bridge to allow relief aid to reach those affected.
The English-speaking club maintains a busy schedule of projects, including a symposium to promote Breast Cancer Awareness Month in October. Other continuing efforts include hygiene and sanitation education and road safety tips for schoolchildren. The club partners with the Philippine Gift of Life Foundation on medical missions providing surgeries for people in need.
In an area that has increasingly become dependent on tourism, ecological projects have become a focus of the club. “Our contribution is to help protect and enhance the environment through tree and mangrove planting, coral trans-plantation, coastal and beach cleanups, and promoting a plastic-free Bohol,” says Heberer. The club also planted a friendship garden at a limestone quarry. “We hope that one day it will become a tourist destination in the province.”
The club carries out its activities with joyful vigour. “We try not to stress the members with too many serious meetings,” says Heberer. “Even if we follow rules and regulations in the regular meetings, we try to make them lively and interesting.”