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Rotary Theme & Citation



 

 

A hallmark of Rotary service has always been Rotarians commitment to doing what needs to be done. Every day, in tens of thousands of communities, we look around us to see how and where we can best help others. 

The help we provide responds to many situations and takes many forms. On a club level, we might take books to a school, help a disabled person with errands, or volunteer in a jobs program. Together with other clubs, we are capable of projects with greater reach. And the participation of our entire network of clubs, along with the support of The Rotary Foundation, has allowed us to commit to our primary and most ambitious goal: the global eradication of polio.  

When choosing our service projects, we do our best to work in ways that will have the most positive, and most lasting, impact. But to ensure a better world for many generations, we must begin by taking care of our youngest generation. This is why, in 2008-09, I will ask Rotarians everywhere to focus on the most precious resource of every community: our children. 

Every child deserves the chance at a healthy life. Unfortunately, every day, some 30,000 children under the age of five die from preventable causes. When I first learned this statistic, I thought that surely there had been a mistake, and the number was an error. Unfortunately, it was not. Every day, around the world, children die needlessly of pneumonia, measles, and malaria. Thousands die every day from the lack of a most basic resource: clean water. And many more die from a combination of factors, in which malnutrition and poverty play major roles. 

I would like to see reducing the child mortality rate become a key goal of club and district service projects in the year ahead.

This is why the RI theme for 2008-09 is Make Dreams Real. Food and water, health care and schooling, the chance at a long and full life - this is the unrealized dream of too many children. In 2008-09, I ask you to Make Dreams Real for these children and their families, and to work with me toward the Rotary dream of a happier, healthier, and more peaceful world.

The great majority of childhood deaths occur in the developing world, and that is where the most work must be done. But every single Rotary club can also do its part to help keep the children in its own community safe and well. Even in the wealthiest countries, there are children without access to medical care. Every day, children die for want of simple technology such as smoke detectors, bicycle helmets, and car safety seats. And in every part of the world, children still face the threat of polio - and remain at risk until we keep our promise of making the world polio-free.

As a parent, I know how precious our children and grandchildren are to us. We love them, care for them, and protect them as well as we are able. As a Rotarian, I believe that we also have a responsibility to love, care for, and protect the children in our communities - and everywhere in the world.

For the last few years, RI's presidents have chosen to continue a consistent set of service emphases, focusing every year on projects in health and hunger, water, and literacy. There has been a good reason for this decision: These are areas where true progress can be made with the wise use of Rotary resources. These are also areas where the need is tremendous, and the ability of Rotarians to help is great.

I plan to keep these three emphases but to ask the entire family of Rotary to make a special effort, in this Rotary year, to focus on projects that will make a difference in the lives of children. To this end, each one of these three emphases is inextricably linked with the others. Safe and available water immediately and drastically reduces a childνs risk of death from waterborne illness - the cause of 6,000 deaths daily. Good nutrition is necessary for healthy growth and improves a childνs resistance to disease. And the ability to read and write gives a child a better chance at raising the next generation in prosperity and health.

Rotary is a truly global network of volunteers. Our structure allows us to partner with clubs around the world, combining the skills and resources necessary to supply the right help in the right place at the right time. Our organization is uniquely able to tackle a goal as ambitious as a reduction in the child mortality rate - but only if we work together. If we take full advantage of our own resources, and those available to us through other clubs and our Rotary Foundation, then we will have the potential to make a real difference - and to Make Dreams Real for the worldνs children.
 

 

Dear club presidents,

            It is a joy to welcome you to your year in office and an honor for me to serve as your president. Our Rotary history is one filled with accomplishment, and I come to this year filled with plans and ambitions for the great good we can do together. When our organization turns its considerable strength and talent toward a goal, we have shown the world what we can accomplish. 

This year, the time has come to show the world what we can do to reduce child mortality. Rotary has an array of programs in place that can help achieve this goal by addressing the underlying problems in communities where children often do not live to reach five years of age. When passionate Rotarians harness their energies to provide food and the means to raise more, create access to clean water, provide the small loans parents need to start the businesses that will support their families, and immunize the world's children against the diseases that cripple or rob them of their lives, then we bring the Rotary movement to its fullest expression. When we carry out the tasks that save children's lives, we Make Dreams Real. 

This year's citation program serves as a guide your club can use to Make Dreams Real. Based on the four Avenues of Service and membership growth, it provides a framework for a healthy, vibrant club. I encourage your club to achieve the citation, not as a source of additional honor but as a way to ensure that your club is making a difference in the world. The program is also open to two of our partners in service, Rotaract and Interact, as a means of focusing and increasing the good that Rotary does in the world. 

To qualify for a citation, your club should initiate a service project that will reduce child mortality and complete the membership goal and one activity from each of the five categories listed in this brochure between 1 July 2008 and 31 March 2009. The scope of the activities should be in proportion to the number of Rotarians in your club and their abilities, interests, and skills. Once your club has met this challenge, complete the certification form and submit it to your district governor by 31 March 2009. Governors must submit a list of certified clubs to RI World Headquarters, and it must arrive by 15 April 2009. 

At the end of this year, we will celebrate our accomplishments together at the RI Convention in Birmingham, England. It is an honor for me to invite you to that celebration, which will be an enjoyable end to our year together.

Join me as we Make Dreams Real

Recognition for District Governors

To qualify for recognition, 50 percent or more of the clubs in your district must earn a citation, and the governor and 50 percent or more of the district's club presidents must have brought a new member into Rotary between 1 July 2008 and 31 March 2009. 

2008-09 Rotaract and Interact Presidential Citation

Rotaract and Interact clubs may also be recognized for undertaking worthy service activities that demonstrate how we can Make Dreams Real. To qualify for the citation, Rotaract and Interact clubs must complete at least four activities overall from any of the categories. The sponsoring Rotary club must sign the Rotaract and Interact Presidential Citation Certification Form and submit it to the district governor by 31 March 2009. Governors must submit a list of certified clubs to RI World Headquarters, and it must arrive no later than 15 April 2009.

 Service Project (required)
Initiate a local or international service project that reduces child mortality.

Membership Goal (required)
Achieve a net increase of one member by 31 March 2009. (Suggested goal: Achieve a net membership increase of 10 percent.)

 Membership
•        Ensure that a club member attends the district membership development seminar.
•        Have 10 percent or more of the membership, other than the club president, bring in
         new members by 31 March 2009.
•        Ensure that a club member attends a regional presidential conference.
•        Recruit at least one alumnus from Foundation programs (Ambassadorial Scholars,
         Group Study Exchange team members, Rotary World Peace Fellows) or RI programs
         (former Youth Exchange students, Rotaract or Interact members) into membership           by 31 March 2009.
•        Give formal recognition to any club member who recruits more than one new member
          by 31 March 2009.
•        Encourage diversity of membership, and promote a balanced membership. Induct new
          members from demographic groups not currently represented in your club.
•        Conduct an analysis of qualified professional and business leaders within the
          community to identify prospective members, and invite them into membership.
•         Retain members in Rotary by helping relocated Rotarians join a club in their new
           community.
•         Report new members monthly to RI by using Member Access at www. rotary.org.

 Club Service
•        Have 5 percent of your members attend the RI Convention.
•        Give your local public or high school library a magazine subscription to The Rotarian (or
          Rotary regional magazine).
•        Ensure that incoming club officers and members attend the presidents-elect training
          seminar, district assembly, district Rotary Foundation seminar, and district conference,
          as appropriate.
•        Recognize a member who is providing outstanding service toward polio eradication.
•        Ensure that every Rotarian in your club is personally invited to participate in club
         activities, whether it be serving on a project committee or taking responsibility for some
         aspect of club service.
•        Recognize a Rotarian in your club who actively participated in the full range of club
         projects and programs with the Four Avenues of Service Citation.
•       Include non-Rotarian family members (for example, spouses, children, parents, widows,
         widowers) in the family of Rotary through service and fellowship activities on at least
         five occasions.
•        Appoint a family of Rotary committee to assist with projects and activities for
         Rotarians and their families.
•       Invite a speaker from a local nongovernmental organization, or present a club program
         on the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (www.un.org/millenniumgoals).
•      Have a current or former Rotary World Peace Fellow speak at a club meeting.

Vocational Service
•     Hold a forum on ethics and the application of The Four-Way Test in business and
       professional life.
•     Present all new club members with a copy of The Four-Way Test or the Declaration of
       Rotarians in Businesses and Professions (200-EN).
•     Sponsor a day for Rotarians to bring young people to their places of business to educate
       them about career opportunities.
•     Have at least one member provide an internship at his or her place of business to a high
      school or college student.
•     Organize a vocational service activity during Vocational Service Month (October).
•     Register a club member as a Rotary Volunteer, and encourage him or her to seek a
      Rotary Foundation Volunteer Service Grant.
•    Have a club member host a Group Study Exchange team member at his or her place of
      employment.
•     Participate in a career counseling and development project for young people in your
      community, stressing the importance of formal education in meeting career goals. 

Community Service
•     Conduct a community needs assessment and use it to establish new local service projects
       that will involve at least half of the club members and their spouses. Consider using 
       Goodwill Industries International* as a project resource.
•     Sponsor a new Rotary Community Corps.
•     Conduct a water project in your community.
•     Conduct a project that decreases child mortality by addressing hunger issues in your
       community.
•    Sponsor or participate in a project that addresses the problems of child abuse or street
      children.
•     Sponsor or participate in a health awareness campaign or a project that addresses health
      concerns.
•    Sponsor or participate in a community literacy project. Consider working with the
      International Reading Association* in developing the project.

•    Sponsor or participate in a project that addresses child safety, such as road or playground
      safety.
•    Share Rotary with the general public by placing a public service announcement, possibly
     one from Rotary's public image campaign, in a print publication, on a radio or TV program,
     or on a billboard.
•    Sponsor or participate in a project designed to promote peace or conflict resolution.
•   Conduct a community service project carried out by club members and Rotary Foundation
     alumni.
•   Sponsor a new Interact or Rotaract club.
•   Sponsor a participant in a Rotary Youth Leadership Awards (RYLA) event.
•    Adopt a school.  

 International Service
•  Support or register a project on the World Community Service ProjectLINK.
• Using the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (www.un.org/millenniumgoals) as a
   starting point, develop and initiate a new project in upport of international service
   that will be carried out by at least half of  your members.
•  Seek a Rotary Foundation Matching Grant or Health, Hunger and  Humanity (3-H) Grant for
   a water,  health, hunger, or literacy project with the goal of reducing child mortality.
•  Achieve the Every Rotarian, Every Year  goal of US$100 or more per club member in
   Annual Programs Fund contributions to The Rotary Foundation.
•  Conduct an international service project in support of water management and sanitation.
•  Conduct an international literacy  project.
•  Identify a qualified candidate to compete at the district level for at least one Rotary
   Foundation  Educational Programs award (Ambassadorial Scholar, Rotary World Peace
   Fellow, Group Study Exchange team member or leader, Rotary Grants for University
   Teachers participant).
•  Sponsor a Group Study Exchange team or host a team member, or participate in a Rotary
    Friendship Exchange.
•  Give a club program on Global  Networking Groups, or have at least 5 percent of club
   members join one of these groups.
•   Make a club contribution to PolioPlus or PolioPlus Partners.
•  Implement a club program on PolioPlus and Rotary's role in the Global Polio Eradication
    Initiative.
•  Have a club member serve as a Rotarian host counselor for a Rotary Foundation
   Ambassadorial Scholar.
•  Conduct an international service project that addresses hunger issues for children.
• Sponsor or host a Youth Exchange student, Ambassadorial Scholar, or Rotary World Peace
   Fellow.
•  RI has a formal cooperative relationship with this organization.   


                                                                                            
                                                                                    _________________________

                                                                                         Dong Kurn (D.K.)Lee
                                                                                
 President Rotary International
                                                                                                 2008-09

© Rotary Club of Butwal

© Rotary Club Of Butwal, RI District 3292