Stories
   
The Phoenix 20th November 2022

Tonight we welcome DG Mina Howard and induct two new members
Kim Mannion and Wendy Stein
Meet Rotary’s first female President
 
Rotary International President Jennifer Jones is ready to hit the ground running as she takes office 1 July as the first female president in Rotary history. She is a member of the Rotary Club of Windsor Roseland, Ontario, Canada, and the founder and president of Media Street Productions, an award-winning media company in Windsor. Having previously served Rotary in a variety of roles including vice president, director, and Rotary Foundation trustee, her talents have strengthened Rotary’s reach and impact. Learn more about Jones in a profile in the July issue of Rotary magazine. Watch the presidential changeover ceremony on Facebook.
Greetings from RC Manchester Breakfast
Margaret Blowey, a fellow member of Marilyn's DG cohort and regular attendee at our meetings sent this from their new President subsequent to his changeover.
 
To: President Marilyn, 
 
Greetings from the RC of Manchester Breakfast to the E-Club of Greater Sydney 
 
All the very best for the forthcoming year.
 
President Khan  
 
Marilyn has replied to this friendly gesture.
 
 
 
 
 President Khan with local Fallowfield Councillor Jade Doswell
Judy's trip to Oecusse
A comedy of Errors?
Soon after I had booked my return to Timor leste. I wrote in my newsletter, “I am excited but
uncertain and a little intimidated at the thought of going back”.
Sometimes I reckon you should go with your gut feeling and call off a venture that doesn’t feel quite
right! Not quite three weeks after I arrived I am now back home, for a reset and a rethink.
My first diary entry for the trip - “After a 2 1⁄2 year hiatus, because of covid and border closures, I am
finally back in Dili. Not sure if I am pleased, concerned, excited or what, everyone seems to be excited
for me so I guess that will have to be enough until I sort myself out!
 
To read Judy's report in full click here
Rotary e-club empowers girls in Kenya

Young women receive training in self defense during a project to empower girls in Kenya.

 

By Roberta Porter, Rotary E-Club of District 5450

Iwas shocked and stunned as I sat in silence listening to the pain in my daughter’s voice. She was calling me from Kenya where she had travelled as a volunteer with an Australian volunteer organization.

She described witnessing first-hand the impact poverty was having on the health and wellbeing of families and especially the children she was working with. The main focus for her at that time was lack of education about puberty, sexual health, and sexual violence.

She returned to Australia with a burning need to take action. After a quick fundraising campaign, she returned to Kenya and enlisted the services of Ujamaa Africa to provide a gender-based violence prevention program. Having completed the program in one school, she decided to go back and run the program in another school. We decided it was now time to talk to Rotary.

My husband and I are members of Rotary and have many contacts within the clubs in the Townsville North Queensland area of Australia. Victoria was invited to speak at a number of these clubs and at the district conference. She was overwhelmed with the support she received and was able to return to Kenya the following year and bring the program to another large school in this same community.

Earlier this Rotary year, I listened to 2021-22 Rotary International President Shekhar Mehta urge members to make empowering girls a priority. This time I turned to my own club and was delighted when the board agreed to make the Kitengela school sexual health initiative one of their 20th year celebration projects.

By this time Victoria had become a Rotarian herself, appreciating the power of Rotary in her work. She established an NGO www.jifunzeinternational.com which now works with Rotary clubs across the world and Rotaract clubs in Kenya.

With a grant from the Rotary E-Club of District 5450 and some additional sponsorship money from Jifunze International and clubs in Rotary District 9560 (Australia), we were able to provide comprehensive training for both the girls and boys.

The program includes

  • Puberty and sexual health education, including self-defense.
  • Assistance for children experiencing domestic violence and sexual abuse, including pathways for heath checks and counselling sessions.
  • Data collection around children affected, this helps to inform where future projects can be directed.

Results from the reviews carried out indicate that following training there is a 47% decrease in rape cases, 52% of girls put their training into use to prevent an assault, 74% of boys trained successfully stopped an assault, and there was a 46% decrease in pregnancy and related school dropouts.

During the training in Kitengela an opportunity was given to our club to witness the classes in progress. We were given time to speak to the educators and get a real understanding of what the lessons involved.

This project was so much more special for our e-club because of the international involvement of clubs such as the Darwin Sunrise Rotary Club, Townsville Central Rotary Club, Ross River Rotary Club, Rotary E-Club of Outback Australia in District 9560, and the Rotaract Club of Kitengela. (Earlier projects had been supported by the Rotary Club of Mundingburra, Rotary Club of Darwin South, Rotary Club of Mareeba, and Rotary Club of Townsville Sunrise, with support from Rotary District 9560.)

What do you know about Rotary
Diversity of Rotary International Presidents.
1942-43 Fernando Carbajal (civil engineering)  
Rotary Club of Lima, Peru
 ROTARY VISION: The application of practical action in solving problems, locally and worldwide
" The prevailing Rotary attitude is rendering service is practicality. Its aim in performing a useful action is to be helpful and serviceable, not sentimental...As Practical idealists, we temper the fanciful flights of the dreamer with the limitations of common sense."
 - Address to 1943 Rotary Convention, St Louis, Missouri, USA
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