Rotary International Theme 2022-2023
|
THE
ROWEL
Rotary Club of
Durham |
Rotary International President:
Jennifer E. Jones Rotary District
5160 Governor:
Suzanne BragdonDurham Rotary President: Eric Hoiland
_____________ Editor: Phil Price Publisher: Jen Liu |
|
|
February 7, 2023
|
will be held on September 17,
2023 |
|
2023 Calendar for Durham Rotary | |||||||
F e b r u a r y |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |||
5 | 6 |
7 Meeting TBA (Dave Jessen) |
8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | |
12 | 13 |
14 No Meeting |
15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | |
19 | 20 |
21 |
22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | |
26 | 27 |
28 No Meeting |
|||||
M a r c h |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |||
5 | 6 |
7 Meeting TBA (Steve Plume) |
8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | |
12 | 13 |
14 No Meeting |
15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | |
19 | 20 |
21 |
22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | |
26 | 27 |
28 No Meeting |
|
The
Meeting Opening
The meeting was called to
order by Eric Hoiland at the Butte Creek Country Club. He asked Ravi Saip
to lead the pledge, which he did. He then asked Jim Patterson to
present the invocation, which he did. He asked Larry Bradley to lead
us in a song. He led us in singing “America”.
|
FUTURE
MEETINGS: Meetings will
be at the location noted, at 6:00 pm. |
February 21st: Will be at the BCCC. Your editor will present a program
regarding the North Valley Health Education Foundation. March 7th: Steve Plume will
present the program at the BCCC. March 21st: District Governor will visit. Board Meeting at 5:00 pm. Meeting at 6:00 pm. April 4th: Mike Crump will present the program at the
BCCC April 18th. Jessica Thorpe will present a program at
the BCCC. |
.
Announcements
Paradise Crab Feed
Brian Gray of the
Paradise Club announced that their Crab Feed will be on Saturday,
February 11th, 2023, 5:30pm – 10:30pm, at the Veterans Memorial Hall – Paradise
What: Full bar, Great Crab, Shrimp and Tri Tip! Dessert!! Music and dancing! Great Auction items! Sponsors helping Paradise rebuild! He
reports that they are looking for silent auction items, just a we are. Oher clubs in the area are helping them.
He is also
looking for volunteers to help with their Crab Feed. We usually have 4 members volunteering. If you can volunteer, contact President Eric.
Chico Sunrise Club
The Chico Sunrise
Club will be having a dinner and auction on March 18th.
Camp Royal
Camp Royal will
be June 5th to 10th at the Bar 717 Ranch, near
Hayfork. For more information and
registration go to: www.camproyal.org.
Camp Venture
Camp Venture will
be June 21st to 25th, probably in Vallejo, but I have no
further information. It is not on the District’s web site yet.
Rise Against Hunger
The Rise Against
Hunger workshop (packaging of food) is tentatively schedule
for April 24th, but this has to be verified.
Introduction
of Visitors.
Steve Plume introduced Tom Knowles, a potential future
member.
Peggi Koehler introduced Karin
Weber, also a potential future member.
Dave Jessen was recognized for
his 46th wedding anniversary (which was February 4th). The amount of his recognition was $46
Glenn Pulliam who got the
Grinder at the last meeting for $100, in absentia, will need it. He is still in Mexico.
Next Meeting
The next meeting will be on February
21st at the Butte Creek Country Club. I will present a program regarding the North
Valley Health Education Foundation.
The District Governor will be
visiting on March 21st. There
will be a Board Meeting before at 5:00 pm.
Tonight’s Meeting Program
Dave Jessen gave us a history of Durham Rotary
during the 35 years that he has been a member.
He noted that initially, Durham Rotary did not have fundraisers. If there was a project the Club wanted to do,
the members simply contributed to it out of their own pockets. Eventually there was an event that produce
about $350. Then Bruce and Peg Norlie came up with what became the Harvest Festival. And more recently we started the Crab Feed,
both raising thousands of dollars. The
main things for him are what we do for students. The scholarships, Camp Royal, Camp Venture
and Students of the Month. It was very
interesting to see how far we have come.
Membership
Bring guests who you think you can
interest in becoming a member. Think of
business owners or managers to bring. Your
dinner and your guest’s dinner will be paid for by the Club. Also, bring a guest to one of our occasional
social gatherings in the Durham Park or a Pizza place (Monday Night Football).
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 their communities’ 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.
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 the District Governor
CONFLICT IS GOOD. (Really?) By District Governor Suzanne Bragdon
I remember exactly where I was when the statement
“Conflict is Good” boomed across the auditorium. The 2022 Rotary Presidential
Conference Houston: Serve to Bring Peace — a preconference to the Rotary
International Convention. Two days of inspiration, new perspectives and
personal growth. The speaker was Julia Roig.
“Conflict is good?” My face scrunched up in a look of puzzlement – exactly as
she intended. I was hooked and drawn-in to both listen and understand. Two keys
to conflict resolution. What’s your initial reaction when you hear the word
“conflict?” If you’re like most, it’s avoid; negative
feelings of mistrust, disrespect, disdain, even hate. A belief that conflict morphs into insurmountable arguments and hinders
moving a process, decision or relationship forward. Roig
took a different perspective, especially in the environment she has built her
career around: Peacebuilding, with the emphasis on positive peace. (See Roig’s TedxTalk at https://youtu.be/DcKdClnpz4k )
Conflict, like change, is part of the human condition. If
managed well, where people truly listen and understand other perspectives,
that’s when the benefits of conflict emerge. Consider: · Welcoming and working
through different opinions and approaches that may on the surface appear to be
incompatible ideas, resulting in new ideas not before imagined. · Unleashing team creativity
and energy when charged to address individual and shared interests. · Through a better
understanding and appreciation of people’s perspectives (even if there is
disagreement), relationships are improved, irritations reduced and cohesiveness
built. I suspect most of you have heard of “getting to yes” or “interest-based
bargaining” among other techniques used to manage conflict. We even have
members from the Berkeley Rotary Club that hold “courageous conversations”
monthly on some of our most intractable societal differences. (Contact Maxim Schrogin to check it out: maximds42@gmail.com) Our
take-away from Julia Roig and so many others? Let’s
embrace and harness the power of conflict
_______________________________________________________________________________________
From Rotary International |
Wen
Huang
A
glittering, guitar-shaped sign for a Hard Rock Cafe welcomes me when I step out
of Warsaw Central Railway Station. I snap a photo and send it to a journalist
friend whose wife used to collect Hard Rock Cafe T-shirts from former communist
countries. She and other pop culture experts believe that there is a strong
relationship between rock 'n' roll and the fall of communism in Eastern Europe.
From my perspective, the sign is one example of a loud declaration of Poland's
modern identity.
When
I turn to take in the rest of Warsaw's central landscape, I am confronted by
the Palace of Culture and Science, a hulking edifice that rises nearly 800 feet
and remains the second-tallest building in Poland. Begun in 1952 and completed
after Stalin's death, this Soviet-style high-rise that resembles the Empire
State Building was a "gift" from Moscow to its unruly satellite. At
night, the Poles light the building in hues of yellow and blue, Ukraine's
national colors, in solidarity with their besieged neighbor. This symbol of
Poland's communist past overlooks nearby shopping centers decked with Christmas
lights and neon signs proclaiming Western fashion brands.
It
is approaching 8 p.m., and though I am inspecting my surroundings outside the
train station, my thoughts are focused on the days ahead. During my career as a
journalist, I have covered international crises, violent revolutions, and
natural disasters around the world. So I wanted to
visit Ukraine to see for myself the conditions for millions of Ukrainians who
have suffered and endured since Russia invaded in late February 2022.
From
my home in Chicago, I followed news of the war closely. Working for Rotary, I
received near-daily reports of members' efforts to assist Ukrainians, including
those forced to flee to neighboring countries. At Rotary magazine, where I am
the editor in chief, we held weekly video meetings early on with Ukrainian
Rotary members, and in the first three months of the invasion, we watched
as The Rotary Foundation collected
$15 million to support initiatives helping people affected by the war. All this
only increased my desire to experience firsthand the esprit de corps of the
humanitarian army that has rushed to Ukraine's aid.
An
unexpected opportunity to do just that came last fall as I vacationed in
Berlin. Mykola Stebljanko, who publishes Rotariets, Rotary's regional magazine in Ukraine, invited
me to visit Lviv, the largest city in western Ukraine. Since Lviv is close to
the Polish border, he suggested that I join him and other Rotary members at a
Foundation seminar there. All I had to do was get to Warsaw, and everything
would fall into place from there.
Pola Konopka, charter president of the Rotaract Club of Warszawa City
This
is why I am lingering in the Polish capital this October night beneath the Hard
Rock Cafe sign waiting for Paulina Konopka, the charter president of the
Rotaract Club of Warszawa City. Pola, as the 30-year-old Rotaractor
likes to be called, takes me to a nearby restaurant, where, over a pepperoni
pizza, she tells me she was on a plane to Maldives with her family when the war
began. Soon after she landed, she contacted her fellow Rotaractors
in Warsaw to brainstorm ways to help. "In that first month, our whole
country, from government to businesses, seemed to have stopped to help refugees
in Poland and people in Ukraine," she says. "As a member of Rotary,
you just instinctively want to help."
Using
social media, the Warsaw Rotaractors appealed to
friends in other countries for donations. With the Rotaract Club of Wilanów International, Pola's club set up a long-term home
in a suburb for about 40 Ukrainian women and children and organized social
events for the refugees, from cooking to disco parties. Club members visited
them on Saturdays, bringing them gift cards and driving them to stores.
"We also meet every week to teach refugees Polish and English and help
them acclimate to life in their new country," Pola says.
A
month after the war started, Poland had welcomed some 2 million Ukrainian
refugees; about 300,000 lived in Warsaw, but many have since returned to their
country, including about half of the 40 people who had lived at the Rotary
shelter. "Many people simply missed their homelands and their husbands,
brothers, and grandparents," Pola explains. The end of some food and
transportation subsidies granted by the Polish government, as well as high
energy and food costs as a result of the war, might also be contributing
factors. Pola says that she and her fellow Rotaractors
will continue to help those who remain find jobs and learn Polish.
As
Russia intensified its bombardment of Ukrainian cities throughout the fall,
Pola said that people might be forced to flee again to Poland, and the Warsaw Rotaractors "will prepare to welcome and help
them."
Back
at the bar of my hotel, I spot Ed Zirkle, a Rotarian from Ohio who's a
photographer and documentarian. "When I saw on TV the injustices done in
Ukraine, I felt that I had to be there and document it," he says, sipping
his vodka on the rocks. So when he learned that the
Rotary Club of Lviv was hosting a Foundation seminar, he decided to journey to
Ukraine, hoping that he could meet up with Rotary members and get them to take
him around the country. His request was forwarded to Mykola Stebljanko,
who suggested that we travel together. Now, both Ed and I are awaiting further
instructions.
The next morning, Jacek Malesa, past
president of the Rotary Club of Warszawa Fryderyk Chopin, invites us to visit a
refugee center established by Rotary clubs in Konstancin-Jeziorna,
a historical town south of Warsaw. Malesa, 58, took
the day off work as a media company auditor to accompany us. Volunteering for
Rotary, he says, is more fun.
The Ukrainian Support and Education Center is housed inside a
three-story concrete building on a quiet street near the center of town. Its
walls are freshly decorated with blue and yellow paper butterflies crafted for
the children of Ukraine by U.S. students in New Hampshire. We visit a simply
furnished room where two girls and four boys sit around a large table, drawing
eyes and noses on a yellow paper cut in the shape of hands. A bit timid at
first, they soon warm to us and are chattering enthusiastically. I catch
snippets of what they're saying as the translators struggle to keep up with the
conversation.
The
children came from the Ukrainian cities of Kyiv, Kherson, and Kharkiv.
"Their fathers served in the military, and they came here with their
mothers and siblings," Malesa says.
"Separating from their loved ones is hard on them. You should have seen
them when they first arrived. They were not responsive to care and
noncommunicative. The care we provide has dramatically improved their
condition."
At
the end of the drawing class, the teachers take the children outside for a
break. Inside a small tennis court at a nearby park, a boy wearing a blue
jacket and a hat that says "I love Dad" moves to a corner and toys
with a soccer ball. His eyes betray traces of sadness. A woman in a red sweater
walks over to the boy and gives him a big hug. The woman, 36-year-old Luliia Cherkasbyna, is the boy's
counselor. She came from Kyiv and has been in Warsaw since the start of the
war. Back home, she counseled autistic teenagers struggling with socialization
issues. "I enjoy working at the Rotary center because I feel I'm doing
something for the future of my country," she says.
In June, before the center opened, Rotarians invited top-tier
psychotherapists from Israel to train Ukrainian psychologists to treat and
counsel children. "See," she says, gesturing toward the children,
"they're smiling. It's very rewarding to see the difference that Rotary
and other kind-hearted Polish people have made on these children."
Luliaa Cherkasbyna, a counselor from the Ukrainian Support and Education Center, watches over the children as they visit the ducks at a nearby park.
Malesa takes us to a traditional Polish
restaurant nestled in the woods. As we eat our bowls of borscht and wait for our
orders of beef tartare, pierogi, and pancakes, Malesa
hands me his cell phone. Michał Skup, president of the Rotary Club of Warszawa Fryderyk
Chopin, is on the line with an update about our travel plans: Zirkle and I are
to head to the Polish town of Zamość, where
Ukrainian Rotarians will meet us to accompany us across the border to Lviv in a
couple of days.
Since
Skup's club is named after my favorite composer, I
suggest that, before we depart for Zamość,
we meet at Łazienki Park in central Warsaw and take
a photo in front of the Chopin statue.
Dressed
in a dark blue sports jacket over a white shirt, the spectacled Skup, the general counsel for an international
corporation's Warsaw branch, looks dashingly fit. He has recently completed a
10-day bike tour from Warsaw to Tuscany, Italy, covering about 1,000 miles to
raise money to purchase a minivan for the refugee center. After I describe my
visit to the center, Skup shares in English — he
spent a better part of his teenage years living in the United States — some
behind-the-scenes stories about the center's creation.
People
in Poland were in shock when Russia invaded Ukraine, and many filled up their
gas tanks, worried they might have to escape if Russia also targeted Poland, he
recalls. "My wife packed our stuff and was ready to run away if the
Russians came," he says. "Fortunately, our fear was alleviated by the
kindness of so many good people around the world. They contacted us through our
club websites, via email or phone, asking us how they can help."
Skup and others formed a working group that,
at its peak, included representatives from 14 Rotary clubs or districts around
the world. They held weekly video meetings to discuss ways to raise funds and
offer relief. "At the beginning, we had no idea how long the war would
last," Skup says. "Many refugees were in
standby mode, without an idea about what to do next. They needed support to try
to build resilience and lead a normal life, especially the children. I believed
this war wouldn't end quickly, so we needed to think of helping refugees in a
sustainable way."
In
September, with the help of The Rotary Foundation's disaster response grants
and with donations from local corporations, individuals, and Rotary members in
Germany, Canada, Japan, Korea, and the United States, the group opened the
center. It hired and trained psychologists, teachers, and a center manager —
nearly all of them Ukrainian refugees — to provide counseling and education for
children and others traumatized by the war. "The whole thing is so surreal
to me," Skup says. "Even though we're
experiencing so much evil in Ukraine, all these good Rotary people were coming
to us out of their own volition, offering their help. The amount of goodness is
just incredible."
During
the conversation, Skup mentions the name Alex Ray
more than once. A member of the Rotary Club of Plymouth, New Hampshire, Ray
provided more than $300,000 to the center. "He's in Ukraine," Skup says. "You might run into him."
Skup echoes what Pola told me the previous
evening, that more people could seek refuge in Poland if Russia escalates the
war. With that in mind, and with the benefit of Ray's donation, Skup and his colleagues in Rotary hope to make a long-term
commitment to expanding the center to provide day care, vocational and language
training, psychological help, and basic medical services to refugees from other
countries, including Russia and Belarus. "We're a relatively small club,
with 17 members," Skup says. "But our clear
commitment to helping others is driving membership, and we're expecting at
least three new members soon."
With
that, Skup strikes a pose in front of the Chopin
monument, stretching his arms wide and holding his club's flag. After taking
his photo, I study the sculpture, which was erected in 1926, destroyed by the
German army in 1940, and restored in 1958. It's then I notice an inscription
engraved on the statue's pedestal: "Flames will consume our painted
history, sword-wielding thieves will plunder our treasures, the song will be
saved."
The
words come from a poem by Adam Mickiewicz, considered by some to be Poland's
greatest poet, but they could just as easily have been written about Ukraine.
Warsaw
to Zamość is a four-hour bus ride through
the Polish countryside. When Zirkle and I step off the bus at dusk, Google Maps
indicates that we are less than 40 miles from the border with Ukraine. Darkness
soon envelops us, and the October air carries the pungent smell of burning
wood. With skyrocketing energy costs, many families here and throughout Europe
are using fireplaces and wood-burning stoves to heat their homes.
Zamość is built on a medieval trade
route connecting western and northern Europe with the Black Sea. Designed by
the Italian architect Bernardo Morando, the city was overrun by the Nazis in
World War II despite the brave resistance of its residents, many of whom died.
The Nazis then systematically rounded up Jews for deportation to the death
camps. I suspect this tragic history of subjugation contributed to the amazing
empathy the townspeople have shown during this latest crisis. In a news report
in March, officials said about 4,000 refugees had found shelter in the city.
The
Morando hotel lies on the edge of the charming and lovingly restored Great
Market Square, which resembles an Italian piazza. On the perimeter of this
perfect square, multicolored Renaissance buildings stand shoulder to shoulder,
their rooflines mimicking the 16th century architecture. As Zirkle and I haul
our luggage into the palatial lobby, we run into Alex Ray, just as Skup had predicted. Ray had raised $1.3 million with the
help of friends, all of it destined to fund humanitarian projects in Ukraine —
and then nearly matched those donations with $1 million of his own money.
Steve Rand, Ray, and Ryszard Łuczyn, a Rotarian in Zamość, collect boxes of sleeping bags at a warehouse in Chelm, Poland, before entering Ukraine.
The
owner of the popular Common Man family of restaurants in New Hampshire, Ray,
mild-mannered and unassuming, is traveling with Steve Rand, fellow Rotarian and
his friend of 40 years, as well as their partners, Lisa Mure
and Susan Mathison. They have just returned from their second trip to Ukraine
to identify what kinds of things were most urgently needed as Ukrainians were
preparing to begin a dark and cold winter made worse by the loss of electric
power.
"Last
March, when we saw images of Russian tanks rolling into Ukraine, it felt
immensely oppressive," says Rand, a 78-year-old hardware store owner.
"It was like a World War II–type of military operation in real time. All
the machines of war are being used against a civilian population that had very
little ability to fend for themselves."
Ray
nods in agreement. "This is a one-way aggression, unfair and unjust,"
he says. "We feel empathy toward the innocent civilians who are going
through this tragedy. It parallels those hurricane victims whom we have helped
in the U.S., except that nobody could figure out how our help could reach Ukraine."
Since
Ray and Rand are members of the Rotary Club of Plymouth, New Hampshire, they
found their solution through the organization. "We decided to use our
Rotary network in Poland and Ukraine, making them a conduit," Ray says.
"In this way, we can assure our donors that the money would go directly on
the ground to people in Ukraine."
Ray
and his big-hearted friends decided to raise money in their home state. Their
efforts have won the support of local politicians, a radio station, a
minor-league baseball team, and local nonprofit organizations such as the
Granite United Way, which served as the campaign's fiscal agent. Ray also
involved his 850 restaurant workers, who distribute cards and pamphlets to
customers. "We're proud that New Hampshire, with a population of 1.38
million, is able to donate about one dollar for each of the state's
residents," says Mure, Ray's partner.
Alex
Ray praises his new Rotary friends in Poland for their limitless generosity.
“Our organization — Rotary — gives us the power to help.”
Ray
says that they are expanding beyond New Hampshire. He and his friends conducted
a reconnaissance mission in Poland and Ukraine last summer and identified six
projects, including the refugee center established by Skup
and his club, and a bloodmobile purchased by the Rotary Club of Kraków to
support hospitals in Ukraine. They have purchased and distributed about 700
tons of food through Rotary members in Zamość.
"Now we're adding sleeping bags and generators," he says. "The
reason we have success is because of the Rotary clubs here. They knew the
situation in Ukraine and take the responsibility to use our funds and deliver
the aid to where it's needed."
Feeling
a bit jittery about my impending trip into Ukraine, I ask the travelers if they
had been concerned about their safety. "My trip in May was my first time
to cross into a war zone," replies Mathison, whom I jokingly call the
public relations manager of the group for her eagerness to share its story.
"I'm just a regular middle-aged, middle-class mom. I never thought I would
find myself there. Before we left for Lviv, our host warned that there had been
bombings and asked if we still wanted to go. I thought to myself: There are
millions of Ukrainians who wake up every day to bombings and find the courage
to feed and clothe their kids and keep them safe. If they can do that, it's my
job to do it for a couple of days and then leverage that experience to help
them in the long run."
The
four go on to describe what they saw in Ukraine: a convention center and
Soviet-era military barracks converted into rudimentary refugee shelters, a
makeshift warehouse coordinating emergency food deliveries into eastern
Ukraine, and a run-down orphanage that they were able to help rebuild. And Ray
praises his new Rotary friends in Poland for their limitless generosity:
"Our organization — Rotary — gives us the power to help."
A humanitarian quartet — (from left) Susan Mathison, Rand, Ray, and Lisa Mure — study a map at the Morando hotel in Zamość.
Their
October trip reinforced the fears of a cold winter for children in Ukraine. Ray
and his friends returned to Ukraine in mid-December. During the trip, he
dressed as Father Frost and delivered 18 tons of food, 1,000 sleeping bags, and
24 generators, as well as 1,300 Christmas packages, to orphanages in the cities
of Lviv and Rivne.
Our
interview might have gone on for another hour if the foursome had not been
called in to dinner. I head up to my hotel room, and as I enter, my phone
begins to ring. It's Piotr Pajdowski, president of
the Rotary Club of Warszawa-Belweder. He tells me to
be ready: Two Rotarians will arrive at the hotel in the morning and escort me
and the photographer across the border.
At
9 a.m., Vasyl Polonskyy and Hennadii
Kroichyk stroll into the hotel lobby, where the
quartet from New Hampshire and a Rotary member from Zamość
are waiting to check out. The mere mention of Rotary removes any language or
cultural barriers among this group of strangers, and we greet one another
warmly as if old friends. The conversations are so animated, we drop our bags
into a jumble on the tiles.
Then,
we are off.
Polonskyy pauses to drive me around the scenic
parts of Zamość twice for good luck, which
we sorely need for our next stop: Ukraine.
This story originally appeared in the February 2023 issue
of Rotary magazine.
In the March issue, Wen Huang concludes his report as he visits Lviv, the
cultural capital of Ukraine and a city under siege.
The Rotary
International web site is:
www.rotary.org
District 5160 is:
www.rotary5160.org 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. |