Monday, 30 September 2013

INTERACT LEADERSHIP TRAINING SEMINAR - 28 SEPTEMBER 2013


Once again our club organised the ILTS for our future Interact leaders. The ILTS was attended by Interactors from Global Indian International School and SMK Desa Perdana. I total about 50 Interactors participated. The event was organised by Rtn Merlin Maria (Youth Service Chair) and the Committee Advisor was PP E Puspa Devi. The trainers were Pres. Pathepen, PP Dr Siva, PP Wong, PP Kan, IPP Gnana, Rtn Ole and Rtn Isabelle. The MC for the day was PE Sam. 

President E Pathepen, Headmistress Mamta Agarwal and Youth Service Chair Merlin Maria


MC PE Samantha did a great job


Interactors listening with great attention


The President Speaks



Pres Brandon (SMK Desa Perdana)  receives his certificate

A happy ending to a great day of learning for the Interactors. 

Friday, 27 September 2013

SNAPSHOTS OF THE FELLOWSHIP ORGANISED BY RC GREATER KL AT THE DISTRICT ASSEMBLY

Where's my husband?
Hold on buddy, why are you not at the SAFARI NIGHT?
The best fellowship night - courtesy of RC Greater KL, the organisers

Safari Night - meet the party animals!
Not so Limbo Rock. A new game!
Entertainment all the way from AFRICA!!!
The Lion King??? Sure ah?




The Food King!
Not the SPICE Girls, the SPICY Girls!!
What a fun filled evening it was
The DUM DUM Game
Everyone in character. Who's the guy with the red turban??? Lost in Africa?

Looks like a red turban invasion of Africa!!??


GREEN ACTIVITY: Sixty Rotarians, together with families and friends, planted mangrove saplings at the Tanjung Piai Johor National Park

JOHOR: IN the wake of natural disasters and an increased awareness of the  ecological and economic role of mangrove forests, there is now a greater commitment to preserve these wetlands.

So it was that the Rotary Club of Johor Baru organised its Preserve Planet Earth event recently, the first in its Mangrove Reforestation Project. In line with the Rotary International theme for 2012-2013, Peace Through Service, a group of  60 Rotarians, together with their families and friends, got together for a mangrove replanting exercise at the Tanjung Piai Johor National Park. The park consists of  926ha of  forest, of which 526ha are coastal mangroves made up of more than 20 true species of mangrove and nine associated  species of mangrove. It is also home to wetland wildlife  such as mammals, reptiles, amphibians, birds, fish,  molluscs and crustaceans. Declared  a Ramsar site in 2003, the park cannot be disturbed ecologically.

The club members were joined by members from the Rotary clubs of Tebrau, Pontian and Kulai, and that of Bukit Timah and e-Club in Singapore. There were also several members from the Johor Baru Senior Citizens Association among the guests. Upon arrival, the group was welcomed by Park manager Khalid Zahrom, who gave an overview of the park by showing a video and briefing them on the replanting process. "This is the biggest gathering of Rotarians in Pontian," said  Rotary  district governor elect Lee Kong Hwee as he welcomed everyone to his hometown of Pontian. He fondly recalled his childhood days when he first saw bakau or mangrove timber  ferried around town. "Now we understand how valuable these mangroves are to our environment and  how they should be harvested sustainably," said Lee.

Mangrove forests are ecosystems along sheltered coasts, and Malaysia's mangroves are more diverse than those in tropical Australia, Africa and the Americas. Mangroves protect the coastline by acting as wave breaks and serve as natural barriers against torrential storms and tsunamis. Their tough root systems not only trap debris, sediments,  nutrients and toxic elements, but also provide breeding grounds for fish, crabs, prawns and other marine life essential for the fishing industry. "Let us not take the wetlands for granted, for our very existence depends on  them," said organising chairman Freddie Long, who emphasised that we need to help Nature by replanting  depleting forests. He also said we need to educate the younger generation and promote public awareness on the importance of mangrove ecosystems. "I hope the corporate sector and other non-governmental organisations will include  Tanjung Piai and mangrove conservation as part of their corporate social responsibility," he added.

One of the activities that is encouraged when replanting is the retrieval and proper disposal of debris from the mangrove forests. On behalf of the club, Long thanked park staff for helping the Rotarians in the replanting activities and thanked the Forestry Department for  providing the 500 saplings. "This is the pilot event in our Mangrove Reforestation Project. "It will be followed by more environment preservation programmes," said Rotary Club of Johor Baru president Ng Swee Poh, who described the replanting activities as an eye-opener for many. The sentiment was echoed by in-coming president Francis Gopal. "In the next phase, we hope to work with the Malaysia Nature Society in educational programmes with youths," said Gopal.

Shod in rubber boots, the group made their way down the boardwalk to the mangrove forest  for their hands-on experience of replanting the saplings.They followed the lead of park staff who demonstrated how the saplings should be planted in the soil that  was made soft and muddy with the endless ebb and flow of the tides. After the saplings were planted in the ground, the staff secured each sapling by tying  it to a supporting stick.

A visit to the park is not complete without a trek to the southern-most tip of mainland Asia. So after the replanting activities, the group made their way along a  boardwalk built through the forest to this spot. Along the way, they stopped to read plaques with interesting information on  wetland wildlife and then extraordinary range of flora and fauna  such as the piai plant, a wild fern from which the park derived its name. At the close of the event, participants were rewarded with a certificate of achievement as a special memento of a day well-spent at the park.

Tanjung Piai Johor National Park is  in Serkat in the Pontian district of Johor. It is about 92km from Johor Baru. For group events and enquiries, call the Johor National Park Corporation at 07-223 7471, or 07-224 2525.

You can also fax 07-223 7472, or visit www.johorparks.com

Tanjung Piai Johor National Parks staff securing the saplings after they were planted by tying them to sticks.

NEW STRAITS TIMES REPORT ON ROTARY

KUALA LUMPUR: Rotary Malaysia celebrated Earth Day recently by planting 250 trees at the Bukit Hari Forest Plantation plot (Field 47) located within the grounds of the Forest Research Institute Malaysia (FRIM) in Kepong, here.

This was a project by the organisation that was aimed at helping protect the endangered ecosystem and offset the area's carbon footprints.
Rotary Malaysia engaged more than 500 people to actively participate in its I Planted A Tree project to provide a hands-on demonstration of how carbon offset projects can be designed and implanted effectively.
"The project is the first in a series planned at the location that will not only achieve great sustainability outcomes, but also create a growth environment," said District Governor of Rotary Malaysia, Mansoor Saat.
"The main difference with this project is our commitment to maintain the trees planted as part of ground and landscape maintenance for 30 years."
The I Planted A Tree project is sponsored by UPS, in line with Rotary Malaysia's goal of adopting a greener lifestyle.
Rotary Malaysia plans to plant 500 more trees in Field 47 by this year.
"A single tree can absorb one tonne of carbon dioxide in its lifetime," said UPS Malaysia managing director, Naeem Butt.
"The UPS Foundation was set up to meet the changing needs of communities.
"We have been actively involved in empowering different groups of people, by giving them the tools to conserve the environment, such as through this project."
Mansoor added that the planting would enable FRIM to generate carbon-offset credits for the organisation to use in reducing its carbon footprints.
"On a larger scale, this project aims to deliver a field site for researchers seeking to understand how to better restore biodiversity, or the way carbon dioxide is sequestered in a landscape."
The I Planted A Tree project was officiated by FRIM director-general Datuk Dr Abdul Latif Mohmod, with Butt, Mansoor and organising chairman S. Kulasegaran.

The Rotarians celebrate Earth Day by planting trees within the grounds of the Forest Research Institute Malaysia.

OUR DISTRICT IS INCORPORATED AND THIS YEAR THESE ARE THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS


DON'T MISS OUT ON OUR DISTRICT CONFERENCE

PROJECT BY RC BANDAR SUNWAY

GREAT PR EFFORT BY RC BANDAR SUNWAY AT SUBANG AIRPORT

WHERE THE ROTARY CLUBS MEET IN OUR DISTRICT FOR YOU TO MAKE UP

OUR DISTRICT GOVERNOR


Datuk Dr Mohinder Singh Malhotra, was born on15th October 1937 in Seremban, Negeri Sembilan.
After completing his early education in the St. Francis Institution, Melaka and High School, Melaka,
he persued his degrees in BSc, BSc Hons (Singapore), MSc (Malaya), PhD (Malaya), Postgrad Dip Soil
Science (Oxford).
It was in the year 1968, when Rotary came into his life when he represented the District as a GSE Team
Member to RI District 280 (Australia). He joined the Rotary Club of Kuala Lumpur in 1980 and served
as Secretary and later bagged the Secretary of Rotary Research Foundation Awards from 1989 to 2012.
He left the club to join RC Kepong in 1992 and served as President in 1995/96. He has maintained
perfect attendance record since then. He has also served as Treasurer, Director of every Rotary Service
and Advisor to the Club.
He has served the District continuously from 1996, as Environment Protection Committee Chairman
and Advisor, Vocational Committee Chairman, Centennial Celebrations Committee Chairman, Strategic
Planning Committee Member, 70th RI Dist. 3300 Centennial Conference Committee Member, Public
Speaking Committee Chairman, Public Relations and Publicity Chairman, Service to New Generations
Committee Member, Group Discussion Leader, District Secretariat, Secretary of Governors Newsletter,
Educational Task Force Member, Community Service Committee Member, International Service
Committee Member, Club Service Committee Member and Rotary Information Counsellor.
Besides Rotary, Datuk Dr Mohinder Singh Malhotra is very active in many other NGOs and held key
positions, namely in International and National Scientific NGOs, Community Based NGOs which are
the Spastic Children’s Association of Selangor & Federal Territory (1985 to current), National Council
of Spastic Children’s Associations in Malaysia (current), Malaysian Council for Rehabilitation (current),
Sentosa Lodge, Ampang Sikh Temple, Balai Ikhtisas Malaysia, Justices of the Peace Selangor, First Aid
Instructor Malaysia Red Cross Society, Taman Hillview Residents Committee., Rubber Research Institute
Senior Officers Association, Council of Union of Employees in Statutory Bodies and Local Authorities,
PIBG Bukit Bintang Girls Secondary School and the Malaysian Child Welfare Council.
He is actively involved in several cooperatives, The Cooperative Union of Malaysia, Koperasi Khalsa (M)
Bhd (1986 - current), Spastic Children’s Association of Selangor & FT Cooperative Society Ltd. ((1991
- current), President, Midlands Cooperative Union Ltd. (current), RRI Staff Cooperative Society Ltd.,
Koperasi Perdanajaya Malaysia Bhd, Board Member, Maktab Kerjasama Malaysia Bhd.
He is actively involved in numerous professional associations and is a Fellow of the Academy of Sciences
Malaysia, The Royal Society of Chemistry, The Malaysian Institute of Chemistry, Malaysian Scientific
Association, Federation of Asian Chemical Societies, Institute of Chemistry Ceylon.
His Professional and Service Awards are in the National Council for Scientific Research and Development
(MPKSN) Award for Public Understanding of Science, Third World Network of Scientific Organisations
(TWNSO) Award for Public Understanding of Science, Institut Kimia Malaysia Gold Medal, Malaysian
Scientific Association Golden Jubilee Meritorious Award, Rotary Research Foundation Gold Medal,
National Cooperative Organisation (ANGKASA) Gold Medal (class 1) for Cooperative Leadership,
Selangor Sports Official of the Year Award, Cooperative Union of Malaysia Golden Jubilee Meritorious
Service Award, RRI Staff Cooperative Society Gold Medal, Midlands Cooperative Union Distinguished
Service Award, Federation of Asian Chemical Societies Citation Award, Golden Shawl Award of Tamil Arts
Society, Rubber Research Institute Recreation Club Sports Achievement Award, IKM 40th Anniversary
Commemorative Certificate of Appreciation. COSTAM Silver Jubilee Meritorious Service Award.
He has held numerous Positions in Sports Organisations, namely the Vice President of Badminton
Association of Malaysia, President of Selangor Badminton Association, Hon. Treasurer of Kelab Aman,
President of Rubber Research Institute of Malaysia Recreation Bhd, Committee Member of Selangor
Sports Council, Hon. Secretary of Malaysian Sports Association for Cerebal Palsy, Deputy President of
Selangor Amateur Volleyball Association, Hon. Treasurer of University of Malaysia Athletic Union and
membership in other sports organisations.
He has also been awarded with many honorific awards and titles, PJN (Federal Datuk) 1997, DSSA
(Selangor State Dato’) 1997, JSM (Federal) 1977, PJK (Selangor) 1985, JP (Selangor) 1988.
Datuk Dr Mohinder Singh Malhotra has four children, Rhenu Kaur, Sarika Kaur, Ammetta Kaur and
Krishan Singh from his late first wife, Shushiela Kumari and an extended family, Lee Eileen, Lee Iwin
and Lee Pauline from his second wife, Datin Wong Ton Hing

Rotaract Model UN instills courage

Delegates to the Rotaract Model UN in Romania practice diplomacy.
Delegates to the Rotaract Model UN in Romania learn the discipline of decision-making. 
By Alina Cristina Buteica, member of the Rotaract club of Bucharest Triumph, and participant in the first-ever Rotaract Model UN in Romania 

The courage to shine and take a stand. The courage to make informed decisions that will impact the world. The courage to find innovative ways for building international dialogue. 
These are the things that come to my mind in reflecting on what I learned during the Rotaract Global Model United Nations in  Baia Mare, Romania, 21-25 August. I had just spent a full year working in 10 countries in Africa when a good friend told me about this initiative and encouraged me to apply. I could hardly have imagined what I would experience.
The event in Baia Mare was the first of what we hope will be many Rotaract Global Model UN conferences. It felt to me like a time-capsule: an intensive week in which young students and professionals from four continents had the privilege to meet, work together and debate some of the most pressing issues on the international agenda at this moment. 

This first Model UN simulated three councils: The Security CouncilHuman Rights Council and the Peacebuilding Commission. Delegates had to step outside their comfort zones to suggest new, practical solutions to old problems, such as the situation in Syria, peacemaking in the Central African Republic, or the impact of climate change on indigenous communities. 

The Romanian model UN introduced a new concept: a Rapporteur Office, responsible for forwarding a report containing our final suggestions and conclusions to the regional and international decision-making bodies, including the UN. As participants, we felt the weight of our responsibility on our shoulders. 
It was an amazing experience. We all bonded and shared so many stories and anecdotes in just one week. Our friendship went beyond borders, cultures, or ages. As I chatted with friends after the conference, we all missed being in debate-mode and taking part in negotiations. The conference has also been a wonderful opportunity for us to explore the  beautiful scenery of Maramures, a historic part of Romania. 
I would say there are four chief things the Rotaract model UN brings forward: 
  • An awareness of the main international issues impacting our lives 
  • The art of debate and diplomacy. Or more simply put, how to look at old problems through a new lens, that of the younger generation. 
  • How to take responsibility for our opinions and resolutions (the discipline of decision-making) 
  • How to seek informed, collaborative solutions through cross-cultural dialogue, understanding, and peace-building (the discipline of collaborative action) 
What is it that makes me feel a bit more confident about the future? It is our ability to take action and shape the future we want to see.  As “Rotary in Action,” Rotaractors and youth from all over the world creatively engage in these debates during every edition of Rotaract Model UN. 

Helping families displaced by conflict in Philippines

Helping families displaced by conflict in Philippines
Families forced from their houses by conflict set up ShelterBox tents, which will be their new homes for now, Zamboanga City, Philippines, September 2013. 


‘Our family has settled here in Zamboanga City, Philippines since 2008. We have a five-year-old son, Toby, and a two-month-old daughter, Blair. On the morning of September 9, 2013, we were awakened by a series of gunshots heard from a distance. We hurriedly tuned in to a radio to find out that communities here in Zamboanga had been held hostage by the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) rebel group. What ensued then made these communities an urban war zone between the rebels and the Philippine government. 

‘We were just a few kilometres from the centre of the war zone so we had to be ready to leave our home if needed. In just a few minutes my wife and I were able to pack two bags of clothes for us and the children; an inflatable bed that we bought for guests who came over to visit for Christmas; an old camping tent; and a baby stroller. The gun battles have reached its seventh day, as of writing, and fortunately for us there was no need to use these items. We were able to survive without having to evacuate our home. 
 
‘Fires have spread’ 
 
‘There are 62,000 people who do not share the same luck that we have had. They are spread across evacuation sites in the city. During the last seven days, houses have been burnt down in the communities where rebels held their ground. Since day two, fires have spread around these communities and firefighters were driven out by rebel snipers. Families in the evacuation sites fear that, even after this conflict, they may never have a house to come home to. 
Families are living in makeshift shelters having been driven from their neighbourhoods by civil unrest, Zamboanga City, Philippines, September 2013. 
‘I happened to come across your website to find whatever I could to be able to help. I have found your organisation most capable of helping out in this humanitarian crisis. I hope that you will be able to assist families start anew.’ 
 
Alvan Pepito is one of the lucky families in Zamboanga as the violence continues. He sent this email to the ShelterBox Operations Team without knowing that the international disaster relief charity was already responding. 
 
‘Following a request from International Organization for Migration (IOM), we sent the remaining of our ShelterBox tents that were prepositioned in the Filipino city Clark to Zamboanga,’ said Operations Manager Alf Evans. 
 
‘Shelter and safety’ 
 
‘Even though we have in-country ShelterBox Response Team (SRT) members, we could not risk sending them to the conflict zone out of a duty of care and responsibility we uphold for all of our volunteers. Therefore IOM, which has an office in the country, acted as our implementing partner and distributed them to families in desperate need of shelter and safety.’ 
 
The ongoing standoff between a faction of the MNLF and Government forces has left approximately 132 people dead, with roughly 158,000 people affected and over 10,000 homes destroyed. Estimates suggest over 109,000 people are displaced in Zamboanga City. 
 
ShelterBox and IOM is also working with Rotary and the country’s Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) to set up the ShelterBox tents at Cawa Cawa evacuation camp in Zamboanga City. To date, 270 have been installed. 
 
Improve conditions 
 
DSWD Secretary Corazon Juliano-Soliman said that the tents will significantly improve the dwelling conditions of the displaced families particularly the women, children, elderly and persons with disability. 

Suffocating Child Saved by Boston Volunteer, 6000 Miles from Home

'Fist-sized’ tumor removed from child’s throat on board the Africa Mercy

A Volunteer surgeon from Boston saved a child’s life in an urgent and complex surgery performed onboard the world’s largest non-governmental hospital ship, the Africa Mercy. Dr. Mark Shrime performed the surgery to remove a ‘fist sized’ tumor from the throat of a four-year-old boy who was slowly suffocating. It was performed in one of the five operating rooms on the hospital ship with a team of professional medical volunteers from five countries. 

Mercy Ship Volunteers Nurse Amy Humphrey and Dr. Mark Shrime examine Emmanoel after surgery to remove a tumor from his throat. Photo credit: ©Mercy Ships / Josh Callow
Mercy Ship Volunteers Nurse Amy Humphrey and Dr. Mark Shrime examine Emmanoel after surgery to remove a tumor from his throat.
Photo credit: ©Mercy Ships / Josh Callow 

Dr. Shrime had met the four-year-old boy named Emmanoel in Pointe Noir, Congo, where the surgeon was volunteering with Mercy Ships. When Emmanoel’s family got to the front of the line of over 7300 people who came seeking medical help from Mercy Ships, their son could hardly breathe.
 
Emmanoel was first diagnosed with malaria over two years ago. After antimalarials did nothing, his parents took him to a hospital in Kinshasa, Congo, where doctors discovered a tumor in Emmanoel’s neck. It was slowly suffocating him, but they were unable to provide treatment. 

His breathing slowly worsened until he began to lose consciousness up to three times a day. His mother initially brought him to the local hospital every time; eventually, she stopped. The boy’s father worked in the port of Pointe Noir and saw the Africa Mercy sail in. He heard that the ship contained a hospital, and was filled with hope for his struggling son. However, patient Selection Day was two long weeks away. 

On patient Selection Day, Dr. Shrime met Emmanoel and discovered the child could barely breathe. Emmanoel was immediately scheduled for one of the first surgeries onboard the Africa Mercy in Congo. On September 4th, the four-year-old was operated on to remove, “a mass the size of my fist,” said Dr. Shrime. He added, “…a small, multinational army welcomed this child and his compromised airway: two anesthesiologists, one intensive care physician, one anesthetic assistant, two nurse anesthetists, three surgeons, and three OR nurses. We were from the US, the UK, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Congo, and we were flanked by an entire ‘difficult airway’ setup, with video laryngoscopy, flexible fiber optic laryngoscopes, and an open tracheotomy tray.” 
Taking care of this small boy was not just a matter of a couple of hours of struggling against an obstructing tumor and rebuilding his destroyed palate. It was management of the patient from the time he was carried onto the Africa Mercy to his quiet return to his mother, a child finally able to sleep peacefully. 
“During the Africa Mercy’s 10-month stay in the port of Pointe Noire, Republic of the Congo, Mercy Ships plans to provide over 3,300 surgeries for adult and child patients onboard, to treat more than 20,000 at land-based dental and eye clinics renovated for the purpose, and to provide holistic health care education to over 240 Congolese health care professionals and 830 community leaders,” stated Mercy Ships President/Founder Don Stephens, who was on-site for the patient Selection Day. 

About Mercy Ships: Mercy Ships uses hospital ships to deliver free, world-class health care services, capacity building and sustainable development to those without access in the developing world. Founded in 1978 by Don and Deyon Stephens, Mercy Ships has worked in more than 70 countries providing services valued at more than $1 billion, impacting more than 2.42 million direct beneficiaries. Professionals including surgeons, dentists, nurses, health care trainers, teachers, cooks, seamen, engineers, and agriculturalists donate their time and skills to the effort. Mercy Ships seeks to transform individuals and serve nations one at a time. For more information, click onhttp://www.mercyships.org

About Dr. Mark Shrime: Since 2011, Dr. Shrime has been a clinical instructor in otology and laryngology at the Harvard Medical School, and a otolaryngologist at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. In addition, he is pursuing a PhD in health policy at the Harvard Interfaculty Initiative in Health Policy, where he is interested in the study of cost-effective delivery platforms for surgical care in the developing world. He has just returned to Boston from Congo and is available for interviews. For more information, please contact: us.media(at)mercyships(dot)org or call Pauline Rick at 903-939-7000

LAUGHTER THE BEST MEDICINE

Here are a few good ones for you.

Teacher: History is a very interesting subject. It tells you about what had happened in the past.
Student: Please teacher, I don’t think I want to study history.
Teacher: Why?
Student: There is no future in it!


Teacher       : Ted, if your father has $10 and you ask him for $6, how much would your father still have?
Ted              : $10.
Teacher       : You don’t know maths.
Ted              : You don’t know my father!
Mother        : David , come here.
David           : Yes, mum?
Mother        : You really disappoint me. Your results are getting worse.
David           : But I will only get my report book tomorrow.
Mother        : I know that. But I am going to Hong Kong tomorrow, so I am scolding you now.


Father      : Why did you fail your mathematics test?
Son          : On Monday, teacher said 3+5=8
Father      : So?
Son          : On Tuesday, she said 4+4=8 And on Wednesday, she said 6+2=8.. If she can’t make up her mind, how do I know the right answer?


Girl: Do you love me?
Boy: Yes Dear
Girl: Would you die for me?
Boy: No, mine is undying love

Man: How old is your father?
Boy: As old as me
Man: How can that be?
Boy: He became a father only when I was born


Teacher     : Simon , your composition on ‘My Dog’ is exactly the same as your brother’s. Did u copy his?
Simon        : No, teacher, it’s the same dog!


Father      : Your teacher says she finds it impossible to teach you anything!
Son          : That’s why I say she’s no good!

Teacher: ‘Where were u born?’
Student: ‘ Malaysia, Sir.’
Teacher: ‘Which part?’
Student: ‘All of me, Sir.’
A boy came home from school with his exam results.
‘What did u get?’ asked his father.
‘My marks are under water,’ said the boy.
‘What do u mean ‘under water’?’
‘They are all below ‘C’ (sea) level’


Absolutely Brilliant – The Germans Take Over Again!!!
The European Commission has just announced an agreement whereby English will be the official language of the European Union rather than German, which was the other possibility.
As part of the negotiations, the British Government conceded that English spelling had some room for improvement and has accepted a 5- year phase-in plan that would become known as “Euro-English”.

In the first year, “s” will replace the soft “c”.. Sertainly, this will make the sivil servants jump with joy. The hard “c” will be dropped in favour of “k”. This should klear up konfusion, and keyboards kan have one less letter. There will be growing publik enthusiasm in the sekond year when the troublesome “ph” will be replaced with “f”.. This will make words like fotograf 20% shorter.
In the 3rd year, publik akseptanse of the new spelling kan be expekted to reach the stage where more komplikated changes are possible. Governments will enkourage the removal of double letters which have always ben a deterent to akurate speling.

Also, al wil agre that the horibl mes of the silent “e” in the languag is disgrasful and it should go away. By the 4th yer people wil be reseptiv to steps such as replasing “th” with “z” and “w” with “v”. During ze fifz yer, ze unesesary “o” kan be dropd from vords kontaining “ou” and after ziz fifz yer, ve vil hav a reil sensi bl riten styl. Zer vil be no mor trubl or difikultis and evrivun vil find it ezi TU understand ech oza. Ze drem of a united urop vil finali kum tru.

Und efter ze fifz yer, ve vil al be speking German like zey vunted in ze forst plas.

I hope this made you laugh and have a great day my friends!

THE ROTARY WAY

I recently made this presentation at the D3300 MEMBERSHIP ACTION PLAN SEMINAR (MAPS) in Kuala Lumpur on the 7th August 2011. It was entitled – THE ROTARY WAY. My mesage – simple – if we think what we do as Rotarians is important, then we must spread our message of hope more vigourously and with greater committment.
Here are some of the ideas I shared for the benefit of all the Rotarians reading this blog.
It is an undisputed fact that many Rotarians for one reason or another fail in their obligation to share Rotary. This is not due selfishness but because we are complacent or lack conviction in what we are doing in Rotary. We lack the courage of our convictions are we ourselves are not convinced that what we are doing in Rotary is truly meaningful. For some, it is because their fellowship has no purpose, for others it is because they lack an understanding of their true power as Rotarians to make a better world.
I want to share with you this painting by Rosa Branson commissioned by Rotary International in Great Britain and Ireland (RIBI). The thematic work, entitled Service Above Self, depicts the many facets of Rotary’s humanitarian service, including the global campaign to eradicate polio and efforts addressing literacy, health, hunger, and water issues. Branson discovered Rotary’s work on a trip to Sierra Leone to visit the land-based operations of Mercy Ships, which is depicted in the painting and provides health care to port cities around the world.
I love this depiction of Rotary. It is empowering and makes me feel important in the scheme of things. What great things we do as Rotarians. Feed the hungry, help people in disasters, heal the sick and work for a more peaceful world. This is why we are Rotarians. This is why we must stand up and be counted. In a world that has gone mad – we are the hope for sanity and goodness. What we do is as Michael Jackson says, “Heal the world and make it a better place”. Let me share some of the lyrics of his inspirational song:
There’s A Place In Your Heart
And I Know That It Is Love
And This Place Could be Much Brighter Than Tomorrow
And If You Really Try……….
There Are Ways To Get There
If You Care Enough For The Living
Make A Little Space, Make A Better Place…
Heal The World, Make It A Better Place
For You And For Me, And The Entire Human Race………
And The Dream We Were Conceived In
Will Reveal A Joyful Face
And The World We Once Believed In Will Shine Again In Grace.
THE PARADIGM OF POWERLESSNESS
Many people in the world are consumed by the paradigm of powerlessness. They feel there is nothing they can do in the face of the overwhelming problems that confront the world. So much so that they are numb to human suffering. Everyday the media of the world bring images of suffering into our living rooms – LIVE. We watch these events of human misery unfold before our very eyes. Images like these:
They shock us, but many people take the position there is nothing they can do about it. So, they turn off the TV, have dinner and go to sleep. It’s not that they don’t care – they just don’t know what to do about it. They are trapped by their own problems – not realising that it is nothing compared to what many people suffer. They rationalise and justify their inaction and simply………
GIVE UP.
I want you to now take a journey with me. Back in time – to when you were a little boy or girl. When you were seven or eight years old.
DO YOU REMEMBER THE TIME?
It was the time when you were really you. It was a time when all things were possible and the indoctrinations of life had not happened. I remember that time well. And whenever I falter in life and think back to the Siva of seven or eight. The Siva who would give the beggar on the street his 10 sens pocket money and not think about what the beggar was going to do with it. The Siva who believed and trusted in the inherent goodness in all people. The Siva who believed in Superheroes.
Don’t laugh at me cynically. We all did – you did too. So did everybody. Because deep down everyone wants to see good truimph. Most people forget the real them. Life takes over and as Shakespeare put it – the whips and scorns of outrageous fortune condition people into a hardened state. Impervious to human suffering – numbing themselves to preserve their sanity.
ROTARIANS AND NOT AMONG THEIR NUMBER – BECAUSE WE HAVE RESOLVED TO FIGHT ON – TO END HUMAN MISERY.
The fact of the matter is that we are outnumbered and outgunned and we need to rearm and recruit. The total population of the world surpasses 7 Billion people. About half that number live in poverty and can’t even help themselves. So we have about 3 Billion people who live in the developed world. We have 1.2 million Rotarians. Even if you multiply that number by 20 to reflect the altruistic people of the world – we have 240 million people. Against a human population of 7 billion and a viable population of 3 billion. The world is not in good shape. Why? Because most people have been defeated by the paradigm of POWERLESSNESS.
Its time we turned to these people and shared our passion and commitment for humanitarian service. That is what membership development is about. We do not need more members – WE NEED MORE ROTARIANS. Believe this and ACT on your belief – REACH OUT.
These were the four founding members of Rotary. Such distinguished gentlemen, Gus Loehr, Silvester Schiele, Hiram Shorey and Paul Harris. What did they share in common with you? They yearned for fellowship. Saw it as an opportunity for service and shared that message with their friends. They believed a fellowship anchored on the ideal of humanitarian service was lasting and meaningful. But even the very first Rotarian group had their retention problem – 50% of this group left Rotary. But the remaining two perservered – that is why we have Rotary International today.
What else will we have in common with them? Yes, we will all die some day. Just like they did. 106 years on, we are still talking about what they did. A friend of mine, once told me, that every person has 2 deaths. I was confounded by what he said and asked him, how is that possible? He said, Siva a man dies the first time when he is dead physically. But he really dies only when people stop talking about him. When the memory of him is dead. That is the 2nd death! Live your life in such a way, that the 2nd death does not happen to you.
My friends, we as Rotarians live a life of service to others and therefore long after we are dead – the memory of our deeds will live. This is why we must commit ourselves to sharing Rotary and bringing in new and young members, so that, the good work that we do will carry on and long endure. Membership development is about ensuring that we leave a legacy of good. THIS IS THE ROTARY WAY.
Our mission, to provide humanitarian service, to promote high ethical standards and to advance understanding, goodwill and peace, is so fundamental and essential to improving the human condition.
GOD BLESS THE ROTARY CLUB OF GREATER KL

Thursday, 26 September 2013

OUR ROTARY THEME THIS YEAR

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Rotaract & Interact - The Future of Rotary

ROTARACT

Rotaract brings together people ages 18-30 in universities and communities worldwide to organize
service activities, develop leadership and professional skills, and have fun. Rotary clubs sponsor them, but Rotaract members manage and fund their clubs independently. Rotaract members work closely with their local Rotary club, and may join after their Rotaract membership ends.


The recently concluded District Rotaract Assembly

INTERACT

Interact is a club for youth ages 12-18 who want to connect with others in their community or school. Interact club members have fun while carrying out service projects and learning about the world. Interact clubs organize at least two service projects a year: one that benefits their community and one that encourages international understanding. While Interact clubs receive guidance from individual Rotary clubs, they govern and support themselves.

The Rotary Club of Greater KL has an active interact programme and we sponsor 3 Interact clubs in SMK Desa Perdana, SMK Sentul Utama and Global Indian International School.