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Rotary100downunder in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | Community organisation



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Rotary100downunder

Locality: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia



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25.01.2022 End Trachoma: Australia is the world's last developed country where this infectious eye disease still persists. It exists in communities where there is overcrowding, poor hygiene and sanitation. We work with affected and at-risk communities to support improved facial cleanliness and environmental improvements. How we help. Many different and simple way. We have ... Provided mirrors, an important Tool for self-pride and self-care, to over 1,300 remote homes; Funded pilot programs for hygiene in schools, water saving taps and portable washing machines; Supported the innovation and development of important water infrastructure suitable for remote communities. Designed a mobile face washing station to be used by indigenous children in remote communities. The face-washing stations are mounted on a trailer that are deployed in Indigenous Communities in Central Australia. https://www.endtrachoma2020.org.au/ Will this be Your Centenary Legacy Project? See more



20.01.2022 Rotary History Bite #14/100: What was a Rotarian in June 1921 Many of the Foundations of Rotary Service were already in place in 1921, the year Rotary began in Australia and New Zealand. Some things have remained the same. But a lot has also changed in our attitudes and behaviours even if the fundamental beliefs remain the same. A quick quiz follows after the citation! So, what were Rotarians like in 1921? An article by Harlan Horner in The Rotarian described the typic...al Rotarian in these terms. Some quotes include: He is not a it-can’t-be done-er. He is a Go Getter He is not a sour faced dyspeptic. He keeps his alimentary canal literally and figuratively open to traffic. He does not have a placard on his desk Honesty in the Best Policy. He does things on the square day in and day out, every day. He does not have Home Sweet Home knitted over his mantel. He is not a masher, not an ogler about a petticoat. He respects womanhood. He does not sit on the sidelines and cuss the umpire. He gets into the game. He radiates no goody-goody atmosphere; he is not a saint; there are no wings sprouting on his shoulders. He is not any one of him all these things; but he is a practical idealist and he aims at his ideals while he keeps his feet on the ground. Count the ways in which things have changed over 100 years. Should we laugh? Should we cry? Should we salute the past? What changes will You make happen for the next 100 years?

19.01.2022 Rotary History Bite #19/100: Jock Reid’s legacy will carry through for another century It is significant to be a Rotarian and there have been many significant Rotarians. Sir John T (Jock) Reid is one whose legacy lives on helping us make a difference in places that matter. Sir John’s philanthropy had as its basis that support from his Charitable Trusts allowed good people to get on with their own good work for the benefit of the community. ... This spirit of giving, combined with his wide networks, enquiring mind and support for humanitarian and social justice causes, ensured that funds went to a broad range of organisations well placed to have a positive impact on the Australian community. He gave his time willingly to several organisations committed to the welfare of the community, including the Rotary Club of Melbourne as a president, long term member and host to Paul Harris. The John T Reid Charitable Trusts, created by the late Sir John Reid (1903 1984), is a family foundation. For over sixty years, three generations of family members have proudly continued his generous legacy. Proud of Australia and committed to its future, he promoted the development of Australian intellectual and artistic life through his support of institutions such as the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute and the Victorian College of the Arts. Every year, Rotary Melbourne pays tribute to dedicated quiet achievers and encourage others to follow their lead through the Sir John Reid Community Service Award. This award is a permanent memorial to Sir John Reid, who served the RCM for over 45 years, being its President in 1953-54. Since its inception in 1987, the Award has been given each year to honour an individual in the Victorian community whose volunteer service is judged to be worthy of special notice. Plus a grant of $10,000 is awarded to the charity associated with the recipient of the Award. The legacy lives on!

18.01.2022 Fresh Rotarians with Big ideas and audacious goals are the lifeblood of our future. Folk who have energy and drive to make something happen to start our next century of service. Making a difference when and where it counts. We can energise members with groundbreaking new projects by simply asking the question What is Your Centenary Project? We can provide a magnet for new members by simply asking the question Do you want to make a mark on history?... If one person from every club, each year until 2021, were to ask a potential Rotarian Do you want to make a mark on history?, Rotary would increase membership by 10%. Imagine the impact that 3,500 new members can make; making a big mark on history! Keeping current members engaged is even better with the question: What is Your Centenary Project?



17.01.2022 Rotary marks 100 years of Australian & NZ service in 2021. We have a proud history to celebrate. And it is a time to launch special new projects, energise new action, attract new members and leverage with community partners in something special. Celebrating the Past and Creating the Future. Just remember this:... Time is ticking by. We only get one shot at this centenary. A special anniversary deserves a special celebration. It's a time for fellowship. A time to regenerate. This is so important Think about the impact we can make. And the legacies we can create. There has never been a better time to be part of Rotary!! What is Your Centenary Project?

16.01.2022 Rotary History Bite #23/100: Quirks of How it Happened Many people have an inkling of when and how Rotary got a kick start in Australia and New Zealand. But the story has some interesting quirks. The common story involves 2 Canadian Commissioners from Calgary and Halifax, Jim Davidson and Layton Ralston, who established clubs in Melbourne, Sydney, Wellington and Auckland in 1921. Their approach was to take a few weeks of exploring a list of prominent people with stature who m...Continue reading

13.01.2022 What is the Value of Rotary? Over 100 years in Australia, Rotarians have given their talents, time and money doing good in the world. Has it been worth it? How about these 10 Thought Starters? Can you add to the list? 1. $45m donated to Australian Rotary Health over 40 years from all Australian Districts helping address indigenous and mental health issues - saving how many lives and enhancing so many futures... 2. The first project resuscitating Scouting after WW1 raised 14,000 pounds in 1921 or the equivalent of $1million+ in 2021 3. If every Rotarian in the past 100 years donated the equivalent of $100, that would approximate $300 million. After leveraging fundraising and matching grants, that may be $1billion++ of making a difference 4. If every Rotarian attended 50% of our weekly meetings with breakfast, lunch or dinner, that pumps $500,000 into the local economy every week, every month, every year for 100 years. 5. What is the community and economic value of all the farmers markets, fun runs and festivals sponsored in 1000+ Rotary communities every year? It must be $millions of fundraising plus creating untold enterprise value for many small businesses. 6. Is it true that Rotary raised $10million as part of the Farmers Aid fundraiser during the recent drought? 7. What is the value to young lives and the economic stimulus that flowed from 60 years of Youth Exchange that now involves 8-9000 students every year (pre or post COVID). A program that started in Australia that must be worth $100million+ in economic value each year around the world. 8. If every Rotarian in the past 100 years volunteered just 1 hour per week, cumulatively that sets a benchmark of 200 million hours of community impact. At $25 per hour, that is worth $5 billion over 100 years and counting 9. What was the value of Rotary urgently delivering 1 million face masks to emergency service workers during the recent bushfire season when supplies were exhausted? 10. Governments save $14,000 each year for every homeless person where Rotary helps find permanent accommodation. How many lives and futures have been saved along with huge savings? You tell me, has it been worth it? Can we create 100 examples of how Rotary has made a quantitative impact on society? It's part of our centenary legacy and a platform to add value for the next 100 years.



13.01.2022 The R100 Centenary Baton goes Outback! Connecting Rotarians everywhere now and for the next 100 years!

12.01.2022 Rotary History Bite #11/100: Has there ever been a Golden Patch for Rotary? So much has been achieved in Rotary’s first 100 years Down Under. From the start, Rotarians have focused on Doing Good in the world. The depth and breadth of impact is staggering over sustained period. And the story continues into our next century of service. Along the way, many specific groups have formed to focus on a key endeavour. Rotaract started as early as 1935 well before adopting that name in... 1968. Interact was inaugurated in 1962 to round out a comprehensive coverage of youth organization. The international Youth Exchange program commenced in 1959 for a long run of success and community visibility. Rotary Youth Leadership Awards kicked off in 1959 starting off as Gundoo Week in Queensland. Fourth Avenue In Motion (FAIM) started in 1964 with a focus on International Service, the 4th Avenue of Service for Rotary before transforming into Rotary Australia World Community Service (RAWCS) in 1987 with a broader charter that includes Rotarians Against Malaria in 1995 and Donations In Kind with roots that go back to the 1970s. And then came the 1980s. Australian Rotary Health kicked off a great decade for health programs in 1981. This was followed by Interplast in 1983 and Rotary Oceania Medical Aid for Children (ROMAC) in 1985. The beginning of a new millennium has seen a surge in the number and size of Rotary Action Groups covering diverse issues such as Environmental Sustainability, Peace, Domestic Violence, Slavery, Hepatitis, Literacy, Mental Health, Hearing, Blindness, Addiction Prevention and more. Even after 100 years, it is clear that our job is not yet done. What is Your Centenary Project that will create a legacy for the next century of service?

09.01.2022 Rotary has done good in the first 100 years. What legacy can we create for the next century of community service? Will it be Connecting people? Teaching? Healing? Caring? Because of Rotary, communities thrive, children play, parents smile and the world shines.... What is Your Centenary project to create a new legacy?

09.01.2022 WALKING FOR PEACE BRING YOUR FRIENDS, CHALLENGE YOURSELF AND RAISE MONEY FOR YOUR FAVOURITE CAUSE. We are proud to announce that Supabarn are supporting the Rotary Aussie Peace Walk; a Centenary event. Help us help Rotary immunise 100,000 children against life-threatening diseases from 9 Pacific Island nations! Join us or Donate at: aussiepeacewalk.com.au Supabarn endeavours to support our community to Live Well. Every year in the Pacific Islands hundreds of children do not... live long enough to see their 5th birthday due to contracting preventable diseases. We are raising funds for 3 vaccines to be distributed to the affected communities, by UNICEF, and they are: Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV), Rotavirus vaccine and Human papillomavirus vaccine (HPV). There is also an Earlybird Discount Offer to the March 2021 Aussie Peace Walk event in Canberra for anyone who signs-up to the mailing list! aussiepeacewalk.com.au

08.01.2022 Rotary History Bite #24/100: Nation Building by the Bootstraps "We migrated to Australia from England in 1963 and I once wrote a poem about being '10-pound poms'. My mother was quite incensed and insisted we were not '10-pound poms' but were sponsored by Rotary, I'm trying to find out if Rotary clubs did sponsor migrants in the 60s."... The answer is 'Yes'. After the second world war, many British families decided to start a new life in Australia. Old passenger liners and even a few converted 'Liberty Ships' were used to take large numbers of emigrants to Australia from Europe. The cost of this was subsidised by various agencies and by Australian State governments, and was set at a low, affordable figure. Typically, this was about 10 pounds sterling and as the British were, and are known as 'poms' in Australia, the slightly derogatory nickname 'Ten-pound poms' was frequently applied to the new settlers. Queensland celebrated 100 years in 1959 and, with Rotary help, created a Festival of Immigration. So to test the idea in 1956, the Rotary Club of Fortitude Valley, Queensland, Australia, decided to sponsor one family's migration from the UK and by various means linked in with the RC of St Pancras, London. The Coker family from St Pancras was chosen by the Department of Immigration and after attending a St Pancras Club meeting, went on their way. Rotarians in Durban, Fremantle and Melbourne met The Rotary ship aka the Orsova and greeted them as they passed by. The Fortitude Club looked after them and helped them settle in their new life. This was sufficiently successful that it was suggested that with the help of other Rotarians in both Britain and Australia, a full-scale experiment be carried out, and in 1958 some 60 families emigrated with Rotary assistance. Eventually, Rotary’s efforts merged with the Bring out a Briton campaign. That’s how we were back then. When they arrived in Australia the local Rotary Clubs helped with settling them into their new homes. In 1959 13 more families were similarly sponsored and the scheme continued for several years with a large number of clubs participating in the scheme. Source: Rotary Global History online and Rotary Club of Fortitude Valley History Into the Valley of Fortitude.



02.01.2022 In 2021, Rotary celebrates 100 years of community service in Australia and NZ. Transforming lives for 100 years......... and still counting. Our centenary campaign is underway. Raising awareness, engaging Rotarians in joint activities plus creating a call to action What is Your Centenary Project? What will your club undertake? Can your cluster create scale with a joint effort? Does your District have a Big Hairy Audacious Goal? This is so important at this special time. How big will our legacy be for the next century?

01.01.2022 A centenary of service is a special celebration. And a special effort is warranted to create new legacy projects that will propel us into the next century of community service. We can energise members with ground breaking new projects by simply asking the question What is Your Centenary Project?. We can provide a magnet for new members by simply asking the question Do you want to become part of history?.... We can find new partners by simply asking the question Can we do something special for you in our centenary year?. We can raise our profile by simply asking media outlets Do you want to know what we have been doing for the past 100 years? And what new stories we have to tell?. It’s that easy! A few simple questions can transform Rotary for the next century of service.

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