Rotary International Theme 2025-2026


THE ROWEL

Rotary Club of Durham
 

Rotary International President:

Francesco Arezzo

Rotary District 5160 Governor:

Joy Alaidarous

Durham Rotary President:

Tom Knowles

_____________

Editor: Phil Price

Publisher:  Jen Liu

 

December 16, 2025



 

Crab Feed 2026

Will be held on
Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026





The Meeting Opening

This was the Christmas Party.  There was no meeting opening.  The party was held at the home of Diana Selland and her husband, George, at 513 Rhapis Drive in Chico.

2025                                       Calendar for Durham Rotary


D
e
c
e
m
b
e
r

1 2 Tuscan Water Dist. Presentation at the BCCC
(Tom Knowles)
3 4 5 6
7 8 9 No Meeting 10 11 12 13
14 15 16
The Christmas Party at 513 Rhapis Drive, Chico
17 18 19 20
21 22 23
No Meeting
24 25 26 27
28 29 30
No Meeting
31


J
a
n
u
a
r
y




1 2 3
4 5 6
Crab Feed Planning Meeting at BCCC

7 8 9 10
11 12 13
No Meeting
14 15 16 17
18 19 20
Crab Feed Planning Meeting at TBA
21 22 23 24
CRAB FEED
25 26 27
No Meeting
30 31

FUTURE MEETINGS: Meetings will be at the location noted, at 6:00 pm.


December 16th:  The Christmas Party, at 513 Rhapis Drive, Chico. January 6th:  Crab Feed Planning at the Memorial Hall

January 20th:  Crab Feed Planning at TBA

January 24th:  CRAB FEED February 3rd: Peggi will present Tina Wolfe about CASA.

February 17th:  Jessica and Diana will present an Interact Program


Introductions

There was an introduction.  Invited to the party were Sean and Rebeca Oberdorf who intend to join Durham Rotary.

Teacher Gifts


This year it was suggested that rather than a gift exchange we should gather together things the teachers in the Durham School System could use while teaching.  Those were dropped by members in a corner at Diana’s house

And then the party began.


Members were asked to bring an appetizer sufficient to feed 10 people and that is what eat. There was some cake served at the end.  It is in the background of the photos.

The president did finally get involved with a drawing.  He had passed around numbered tickets.  If he drew your number, he president did finally get involved with a drawing.  He had passed around numbered tickets.  If he drew your number, he then presented you with a question.  If you could correctly answer it, you got to pick one of the bags on the table.  If you couldn’t correctly answer it, he drew another number, until all the bags were gone.  If you were a Rotarian, the question related to Rotary.  If you were not a member, the question was more generic. Anyway, the question I got was where was the first Rotary meeting.  I correctly answered: “Chicago”.  I got a Snoopy in Christmas clothes.  My wife got a box of cookies.  I couldn’t keep track of what others got.


Before concluding the meeting, Tom asked Larry Bradley to lead us in some Christmas songs.  Larry led is in singing: “Joy to the World”, O Come All You Faithful”, “Jingle Bells” and “We Wish You a Merry Christmas”.

The party/meeting was then concluded.

Next Meeting

The next meeting, on January 6th, will be at the Memorial Hall in Durham.  It will be a Crab Feed planning meeting.  However, there was some discussion about no more planning being needed, so the location may change.  Watch for email.

Membership

Bring guests who you think you can interest in becoming a member. We Need More Members! Your dinner and your guest’s dinner will be paid for by the Club.  Also, bring a guest to oneof our occasional social gatherings.

President Tom is asking the members to bring in new members this year.

Go to the following Rotary International web site for information on membership development:  https://my.rotary.org/en/learning-reference/learn-topic/membership .  From this website there is access to membership development and other related information.

 

The Rotary Foundation Donations

You can make a difference in this world by helping people in need. Your gift can do some great things, from supplying filters that clean people’s drinking water to empowering local entrepreneurs to grow through business development training.

The Rotary Foundation will use your gift to fund the life-changing work of Rotary members who provide sustainable solutions to theirc ommunities’ most pressing needs. But we need help from people like you who will take action and give the gift of Rotary to make these projects possible.

When every Rotarian gives every year, no challenge is too great for us to make a difference. The minimum gift to The Rotary Foundation is $25.00.   An annual $100.00 gift is a sustaining member.  Once your donations accumulate to $1,000 you become a Paul Harris Fellow.

If you have any questions, ask Steve Heithecker.

It is possible to learn more about The Rotary Foundation on the Rotary web site. 

Your gift can be made online or by sending Jessica Thorpe a check made out to The Rotary Foundation to Durham Rotary, P.O. Box 383, Durham, California 95958.

 

From District 5160

The District Newsletter has been uploaded to DACdb - to view it there go to the District tab, open the District Bulletin file and lookfor the pdf file named Rotary District 5160 Newsletter. 

From Rotary International’s News and Features Website

{Note that the proceeding may not be the complete article.  See the complete article onRotary International’s web page.}

Note that the photos in the original article may not have been reproduced here.

Journey of self-empowerment leads to Rotary

By Jonathan Black

If this were a movie it would be a Hollywood salute to grit and gratitude, an inspirational biopic in which a determined woman survives life in a homeless shelter and repays the service organization that rescued her. Here is JanelleHall, mid-2008, in her worn pink shelter robe, jobless after a turn mopping floors at a laundromat, a refugee from an in-law’s tiny apartment with her then-husband and four young children.

“Hours from the street” is how Hall describes the day she and her family got admitted to the shelter in Clifton, New Jersey. This was shortly after a Rotary district governor had called on Rotarians to set up a program to help families like hers battered by the Great Recession, and one volunteer, Bonnie Sirower, who was a board member at a nearby YMCA, was told about Hall.

“She was looking for a hand up, not a handout,” says Sirower, who was part of a team of Rotary members from District 7490 that spent weeks with Hall and others in need as part of the district program. They provided Christmas presents for her children, a wardrobe for job interviews, a bus pass to get her to those interviews, and then leads to a service organization that offered not only job but child care for Hall’s kids, free. “It was like divine intervention,” says Hall.

The daughter of immigrant parents from Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, Hall had flunked out of college, overwhelmed with challenges — small children, an emotionally abusive husband, and “bad decisions.” So, with this chance for a second chance, the Rotary team helped locate a possible college and paid for her application fee.

 

From homelessness to family turmoil, Janelle Hall faced many challenges. Now she’s focused on helping others.



Image credit: Roshni Khatri

“There weren’t any computers at the shelter, forget a laptop,” remembers Hall. “I wrote my essay with a pencil on purple copy paper. My acceptance letter was mailed to the homeless shelter and I still have it today.”

Three years later she graduated from William Paterson University. Soon after getting a job, a coworker said, “C’mon, Janelle, why don’t we get ourselves a master’s degree!”

In Hall’s biopic the pages begin flying off the calendar: a master’s degree in public administration from Fairleigh Dickinson University in 2013; a doctorate in public policy and administration in 2020 from Walden University, where another coworker urged they both enroll for a PhD. “Guess who got her degree first?” Hall says with a grin.

Hall is now an adjunct faculty member at Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey. She has been honored by local and state officials for her contributions to her community. She has written a motivational book titled The Daughter of Destiny, which maps her history and offers “8 steps [that] can lead you to personal empowerment.”

In her own climactic, destined moment of self-empowerment, Hall became the executive director of the United Passaic Organization, a broad-based service group for the city that helps families in need — and the very organization that once helped pay her rent years ago when she was struggling. Her story, not surprisingly, has compelled attention, especially among Rotary members. Early in 2024, for example, there she was addressing 300 people at a Rotary presidents-elect learning seminar in Whippany, New Jersey.

Janelle Hall

“Let me introduce myself,” she told the audience, whereupon she removed the pink bathrobe she’d pulled on earlier, the very robe she had worn in the homeless shelter, to reveal a striking blue dress and her proud empowerment. “I am a homeowner and college professor. I sit on the Board of Governors at Fairleigh Dickinson. I have my own business called Beyond Inspired. I am the CEO of th every organization that I once received services from.”

With each accomplishment the room erupted in cheers, almost drowning out her conclusion: “And all the accomplishments I shared with you are thanks to the magic of Rotary.”

“It took her almost an hour to leave the ballroom after her speech,” Sirower reports. “Everybody kept wanting to talk to her. And she made a promise to me at that time that she would start her own Passaic Rotary club to replace the one our district had lost during COVID.”

Within months, Hall had recruited 25 members and soon after, in February 2025, the Rotary Club of Passaic was officially chartered with Hall now serving as its president.

The club has already hosted its first retreat and is planning an international service trip to the Dominican Republic, which won’t be Hall’s first trip out of the country. In 2024 she was part of an organized trip to Ghana that she describes as a “quest for spiritual growth” and part of efforts “to reunite ... Africans and the global diaspora.” The most meaningful part for her turned out to be a visit to an orphanage where Hall distributed 250 schoolbooks donated by a childhood friend and school principal, Tiffany Crockett, who is also a charter member of Hall’s Rotary club.

 


Janelle Hall helped charter the Rotary Club of Passaic in February and serves as its president.

Image credit: Roshni Khatri

“You surround yourself with change agents. You want to challenge one another,”Crockett says in describing her longtime relationship with Hall.

Hall’s own journey has had no shortage of challenges. She says her husband did not physically abuse her but chipped away at her sense of self in other ways: verbal abuse, denial of control, restriction of access to friends, and a growing isolation. At age 21, “young [and] inexperienced,” Hall married a man nearly twice her age. “My family essentially disowned me because of the choice I made,” she writes in The Daughter of Destiny. She nevertheless kept her father company in the months before his death from leukemia in 2019and helped her siblings take care of their mother, who had Alzheimer’s, until she died in 2021.

There is much to be thankful for. Her children are grown; three of them are currently in college. Hall herself has “taken back ownership of my name.” “My divorce is final!” she writes in her book. “When the judge banged his gavel, he gave me full custody of my destiny.”

“Your journey in life is how you use your success to help others,” Hall says. “Things may seem dim or dark for a reason. It’s up to you to be a beacon so others can understand that darkness is just temporary.” Roll credits. Close curtain.

This story originally appeared in the December 2025 issue of Rotary magazine.

© 2025 Rotary International. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy Terms of Use


The Durham Rotary Club site is:  www.durhamrotary.org

The Rowel Editor may be contacted at: pbprice1784@gmail.com

The deadline for the Rowel 6:30 am on Wednesdays.

The Editor's photographs published in the Rowel are available, upon request, in their original file size.  Those published were substantially reduced in file size.