What happens when what you know turns out to be wrong?

By Rotary International From the August 2015 issue of The Rotarian
One evening, sitting in the back seat of the car, our two girls, ages six and eight, were discussing the show we were on our way to attend. Called The Illusionists, it featured seven of the world’s top magicians. The debate consisted of whether there would be real magic involved, or just tricks.
“When they cut the man in half,” our younger daughter asked, “how do they keep the blood in?” She was convinced there was true magic. Her older sister, a little wiser, wasn’t buying it.
“Easy,” she said. “R-o-b-o-t.” She rolled her eyes at how obvious this… …read more

Source:: Rotary.org

San Diego students tackle vaccine controversy

By Rotary International From the August 2015 issue of The Rotarian
A group of teenage journalism students in suburban San Diego were in the early stages of a new project – an educational film funded by a Rotary grant – when their teacher’s phone rang. A prominent blogger had caught wind of what they were doing from a local news story, and wasn’t pleased. The fledgling film came under fire almost overnight as ripples of protest spread through the blogosphere. With calls pouring in before shooting had even begun, the advisers considered halting the project, questioning whether it would be worth the controversy… …read more

Source:: Rotary.org

A conversation with Caryl Stern

By Rotary International From the August 2015 issue of The Rotarian
The six-day-old baby shuddered with convulsions. Her mother, Rosa, had given birth at home and cut her daughter’s umbilical cord with what she could find – a sharp piece of metal. When the newborn contracted tetanus, Rosa walked miles to reach a clinic. That’s where Caryl Stern encountered the pair. Stern was on a field visit with UNICEF in Sierra Leone and stayed with Rosa, trying to comfort her, until the child died. The image of the baby in pain, hypersensitive to light and sound, stayed with Stern as she got off the plane in New York and headed… …read more

Source:: Rotary.org

From success to significance

By Rotary International From the August 2015 issue of The Rotarian
Robb Knuepfer should be in a hurry. It’s Monday morning and his day is full of appointments, a client meeting, and an evening board meeting. Instead, he’s found time to have coffee with me at a Starbucks near his home in Hinsdale, Ill., outside Chicago.
He’s a busy guy, and he likes it that way. He’s been involved in dozens of volunteer endeavors, including decades in the Rotary Club of Chicago. A well-respected and civic-minded lawyer, he reached the top of his field. Still, he’s ready for more. “I want to go from a life of success to one of… …read more

Source:: Rotary.org

The lost girls of South Sudan and the Rotarian who found them

By Rotary International From the August 2015 issue of The Rotarian
The girls were alone. Their families were dead, or gone, or lost in the broken landscape of southern Sudan. They had nowhere to turn, and no one to turn to. Some lived in the market, others in the cemetery. When Cathy Groenendijk saw them, she couldn’t help herself. She offered them tea, then some food, then a place to sleep in her guesthouse.
“In the morning, we would sit together and talk about what had happened the night before,” Groenendijk remembers. “And what I heard I could not believe. I could not believe it.”
One girl’s father had died, and… …read more

Source:: Rotary.org

Committee members named to nominate 2017-18 RI president

By Rotary International The following Rotarians will serve on the 2015-16 Nominating Committee for President of Rotary International in 2017-18. The committee is scheduled to meet on 3 August.
Zone 1 Masahiro Kuroda, Rotary Club of Hachinohe South, Aomori, Japan
Zone 3Yoshimasa Watanabe, Rotary Club of Kojima, Okayama, Japan
Zone 5P.C. Thomas, Rotary Club of Nilgiris West, Tamil Nadu, India
Zone 7Stuart B. Heal, Rotary Club of Cromwell, New Zealand
Zone 9Hee-Byung Chae, Rotary Club of Seoul West, Seoul, Korea
Zone 11Serge Gouteyron, Rotary Club of Valenciennes-Denain aerodrome, Nord, France
Zone 13Paul Knyff, Rotary… …read more

Source:: Rotary.org

Free toys brighten children’s lives

By Rotary International

Children receive their toys in Badami Bagh, Lahore, Pakistan.

Children receive their toys in Badami Bagh, Lahore, Pakistan.

By Rotary Voices staff

A girl clutched the new purse she had just received during the annual toy giveaway in the community of Badami Bagh, Lahore, Pakistan.

Another child examined the coloring books and colored pencils with interest, while a crowd of other children and their parents surrounded a table in the market square, waiting their turn to select a free toy.

On 11 July, about a dozen members of the Rotary Club of Lahore Sharqi (East), Punjab, Pakistan, took part in the club’s annual event that distributes toys to the needy children in the community. Longtime club member Asim Qadri started the tradition more than two decades ago.

Each year, club members spend several months collecting toys from businesses, soliciting donations, and raising money to purchase new toys. The looks on the faces of the children when they receive their toys makes all the effort worth it, notes Amir Sultan Rana, who served as the project’s publicity chair this year.

This project is just one of many that Rotary members have posted on Rotary Showcase.

Other notable projects include:

The Rotary Club of Patumwan, Thailand, partnered with the Rotary clubs of Taipei Lungmen, Taipei, …read more

Source:: Rotary International Blog

Australian students take opportunity by the horns

By Rotary International The rules of the Shaftesbury Rodeo Academy are simple: no school, no rodeo. It’s a message that teenagers who attend school at Bisley Farm, most of whom have never attended any school regularly, take seriously. Because come Friday night, these aspiring rodeo heroes want to join their friends to ride bulls for a heart-stopping eight seconds, if they last that long.
The school in rural Queensland, Australia, also teaches the boys, who are of the Wakka Wakka Aboriginal people, basic academics and farming skills, including how to care for crops and livestock. It’s a fairly common form of… …read more

Source:: Rotary.org

A good day at Katkar Wadi

By Rotary International

Some of the children at the school we visited. Photo courtesy of the Rotary Club of Dombivli East

Some of the children at the school we visited. Photo courtesy of the Rotary Club of Dombivli East

By Dr. Swati Gadgil, Rotary Club of Dombivli East, Maharashtra, India

Our Rotary club’s women’s welfare society recently went to a tribal settlement in Katkar Wadi, where we visited 60 households and a 35-student school for kindergarten through grade four, handing out notebooks, writing materials, clothing, and utensils. Many of the women in the settlement have never been to school, and it is a rare occasion when they even travel out of their community. Our youth wing conducted games for the children, also engaging our members in the fun.

We were also able to plant trees in the community and distribute snacks and treats. The team left with the determination to adopt the settlement and make a significant difference for years to come.

…read more

Source:: Rotary International Blog

Wildfires can’t stop this Rotary cycling event

By Rotary International

Click to view slideshow.

By Geraldine Nicol, Governor of District 9350 (Angola, Namibia, and South Africa)

Despite raging wildfires on its outskirts, which at times came within yards of the city, the City of Cape Town, South Africa, proudly carried on with its planned cycle race earlier this year. The Cape Town Cycle Tour is organized and managed by Rotary clubs in District 9350 in partnership with local riding clubs of the Pedal Power Association. About 37,000 cyclists from around the world registered for what is the world’s largest timed cycle race in its 38th year.

The cycle race had been in major jeopardy, as the mountains of the beautiful Cape Peninsula had suffered from devastating fires in the 10 days preceding the race. Although the wildfires forced the race to be reduced from 103 kilometers to 47 kilometers, and the route to be altered to keep roads open for fire engines, everyone got into the spirit of the event.

Amazingly, 34,000 cyclists, their supportive family members, and huge crowds of onlookers all showed up on race day. There was a wonderful camaraderie between cyclists as Rotarians and members of Pedal Power cleverly decided to dedicate the race to the firefighters …read more

Source:: Rotary International Blog