SPOKE 'N' WORDS

Issue 26
5 February 2025
 
 
Join our dinner meeting most Wednesdays at The Beaconsfield Club, Holm Park, Beaconsfield, Victoria, Australia. 
 

6.30 pm for 7.00 pm

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Visitors and Rotarians are very welcome.
 
Welcome to our vibrant and relaxed Rotary Club, where community spirit thrives alongside a sense of ease and camaraderie. Picture a place where laughter mingles with purpose and friendships are forged through shared experiences and meaningful endeavours.
 

By the way, this Bulletin is Best Viewed Online 

 
President's Ramblings
 
A great meeting last week with a great guest speaker.
 
Tony Monley, Director of The Rotary Foundation, gave us an overview of the foundation, how it receives it funding and importantly how we as Rotary Clubs can make use of grants from foundation funds to support our projects. Tony spoke to us about the types of grants available, including district grants and global grants.
 
PP Isobel reminded us that the club was successful in securing a global grant to provide two Blaze Aid trailers back in 2020.
 
Tony also gave us a bit of an update on the end polio project. Unfortunately 2024 saw an uptick in the number of cases which only serves to highlight the importance of continuing the program.
 
The article below gives you a bit of history of the foundation and includes a link to the vast resources available on line through the foundation website. There is also an example of a global project right here in Australia.
 
This week we have Paul Lloyd and a team from the Rotary Club of Southern Mitchell presenting to us about their International project: Project LEMUR (Lift Every Malagasy Up Rotary)
 
This project is designed to support 1,000+ Primary School children and their teachers at St. Vincent de Notre Dame de l'Androy (St. Vincent's) Primary School in Ambovombe, Androy Madagascar.
 
Years of severe drought and Covid-19 forces rural communities to resort to desperate measures. Many have had no significant rainfall for years. 
 
Modest crops fail. People eat insects and cactus & even these are dying off. Little access to water is profound, impacting the island's flora & fauna, crops, livestock and people. Fodder can't grow, so livestock are exchanged for food. Farms and homes are being sold. 
 
Children are removed from school, adding to the tragedy and reducing chances of recovery.
 
It promises to be a very interesting presentation.I look forward to seeing you there.
 
 
Cheers,
Andrew
 
 
A SHORT HISTORY OF THE ROTARY FOUNDATION
In 1917, RI President Arch C. Klumph proposed that an endowment be set up “for the purpose of doing good in the world.” In 1928, when the endowment fund had grown to more than US$5,000, it was renamed The Rotary Foundation, and it became a distinct entity within Rotary International. Five Trustees, including Klumph, were appointed to “hold, invest, manage, and administer all of its property . . . as a single trust, for the furtherance of the purposes of RI.”
 
Two years later, the Foundation made its first grant of $500 to the International Society for Crippled Children. The organization, created by Rotarian Edgar F. “Daddy” Allen, later grew into the Easter Seals.
 
The Great Depression and World War II both impeded the Foundation’s growth, but the need for lasting world peace generated great postwar interest in its development. After Rotary’s founder, Paul P. Harris, died in 1947, contributions began pouring into Rotary International, and the Paul Harris Memorial Fund was created to build the Foundation.
 
That year, the first Foundation program – the forerunner of Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholarships – was established. In 1965-66, three new programs were launched: Group Study Exchange, Awards for Technical Training, and Grants for Activities in Keeping with the Objective of The Rotary Foundation, which was later called Matching Grants.
 
The Health, Hunger and Humanity (3-H) Grants program was launched in 1978, and Rotary Volunteers was created as a part of that program in 1980. PolioPlus was announced in 1984-85, and the next year brought Rotary Grants for University Teachers. The first peace forums were held in 1987-88, leading to the Foundation's peace and conflict studies programs.
 
Throughout this time, support of the Foundation grew tremendously. Since the first donation of $26.50 in 1917, it has received contributions totaling more than $1 billion. More than $70 million was donated in 2003-04 alone. To date, more than one million individuals have been recognized as Paul Harris Fellows – people who have given US$1,000 to the Annual Programs Fund or have had that amount contributed in their name.
 
Such strong support, along with Rotarian involvement worldwide, ensures a secure future for The Rotary Foundation as it continues its vital work for international understanding and world peace.
 
The Rotary Foundation is a primary source of funding for Rotary’s humanitarian activities, from clubs’ and districts’ local service projects to global initiatives. It also leads Rotary’s ongoing effort to eradicate polio worldwide.
 
For more information and to see how you can contribute, go to: https://www.rotaryfoundationaustralia.org.au
 

The Rotary Foundation: A hands on approach to saving lives

 
 

SUPPORTING OUTBACK KIDNEY DISEASE PATIENTS

Rotary clubs and districts funded the A$200,000 purchase of medical equipment to set up a diagnosis and dialysis facility in the far northwest of South Australia

 
 
 
This Week's Photos
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
21 and 21... is someone not telling the truth?
 
 
 
 
Project Lemur - RC Southern Mitchell
The Beaconsfield Club
Feb 12, 2025
6:30 pm – 8:30 pm
 
District Governor Visit - Colin Byron
The Beaconsfield Club
Mar 05, 2025
6:30 pm – 8:30 pm
 
View entire list
Member Birthdays
Wendy Moseley
February 5
 
Sam McCurdy
February 11
 
David Button
February 25
 
Andrew Somers
February 27
 
Jane Moore
March 4
 
Sharmaine Squire
March 5
 
Michele Somers
March 9
 
Di Scheepers
March 10
 
David Nutter
March 13
 
Spouse Birthdays
Pat Edwards
February 16
 
Wendy Boon
March 1
 
Jane Moore
March 4
 
Rosaleen French
March 4
 
Sharon
March 7
 
Ann Kraan
March 13
 
Warren Lukey
March 18
 
Join Date
Geoff Double
February 5, 2004
21 years
 
Michele Somers
February 8, 2023
2 years
 
Shoey Schumacher
February 11, 2015
10 years
 
Terry Pollock
February 21, 2024
1 year
 
Tim Moore
February 27, 1997
28 years
 
Marta Faithfull
March 4, 2014
11 years
 
Louise Carter
March 12, 2019
6 years
 
Louise Jackel
March 12, 2019
6 years
 
Mark Caulfield
March 16, 2000
25 years
 
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On to Conference
 
Sergeant-at-Arms
 

Rotary’s response to the U.S.’s plan to withdraw from the WHO, USAID funding

 

Rotary leaders from both countries reflect on the challenges and opportunities of peacebuilding across borders

 
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