banner
Club Information
Great to see you, come back again soon!
We meet Tuesdays at 12:30 PM
Sandals Golf & Country Club
Cap Estate
Gros Islet,  lc
Saint Lucia
DistrictSiteIcon District Site
Rotary's Vision:
"Together we see a world where people unite and take action, to create lasting change - across the globe, in our communities, and in ourselves".

Object of Rotary

The Object of Rotary is to encourage and foster the ideal of service as a basis of worthy enterprise and, in particular, to encourage and foster:

  • FIRST: The development of acquaintance as an opportunity for service;
  • SECOND: High ethical standards in business and professions; the recognition of the worthiness of all useful occupations; and the dignifying of each Rotarian’s occupation as an opportunity to serve society;
  • THIRD: The application of the ideal of service in each Rotarian’s personal, business, and community life;
  • FOURTH: The advancement of international understanding, goodwill, and peace through a world fellowship of business and professional persons united in the ideal of service.

The Four-Way Test

The Four-Way Test is a nonpartisan and nonsectarian ethical guide for Rotarians to use for their personal and professional relationships. The test has been translated into more than 100 languages, and Rotarians recite it at club meetings:
Of the things we think, say or do

  1. Is it the TRUTH?
  2. Is it FAIR to all concerned?
  3. Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?
  4. Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?
Upcoming Events
RCGI Satellite Club Meeting
Coconut Bay Resort
Nov 15, 2018
 
RCGI BOD Meeting
Sandals Golf Club
Nov 15, 2018 6:00 PM
 
RCGI Satellite Club Meeting
Coconut Bay Resort
Dec 06, 2018 5:30 PM
 
RCGI Satellite Club Meeting
Coconut Bay Resort
Dec 20, 2018
 
RCGI BOD Meeting
Sandals Golf Club
Dec 20, 2018 6:00 PM
 
RCGI Satellite Club Meeting
Coconut Bay Resort
Jan 03, 2019 5:30 PM
 
Click on the Image to Register
Birthdays & Anniversaries
Member Birthdays
Carina Snagg
November 9
 
Joan Paul
November 14
 
Sanique Prospere
November 23
 
Annice Jn. Panel
December 5
 
Joel Crocker
December 5
 
Michael Walker
December 14
 
Spouse Birthdays
Katherine Lawrence
November 10
 
Big Chief Vitalis
November 18
 
Delia Everett
December 4
 
Anniversaries
Ramachandra Thippaiah
Kamala Narayanswamy
December 3
 
Shermie James-Darcheville
Shern Darcheville
December 18
 
Join Date
Indra Hermiston
November 18, 2003
15 years
 
D. Lisle Chase
December 1, 1983
35 years
 
Photo Albums
Rotary Plates for Peace
District Governor Dominique VENERE's Official Visit
2017 Hampers for the Needy
Hand over of Playground & GoTo Inserts for Wheel Chairs
Tree Planting & River Picnic
Please add mailservice@clubrunner.com to your safe sender list or address book.
To unsubscribe from future e-mails, click here.
To forward this email to your friends, click here.
To view our privacy policy, click here.
 
ClubRunner
905.829.5299
102-2060 Winston Park Drive, Oakville, ON, L6H 5R7
 
ClubRunner is a registered trademark of Doxess Technologies Inc.
© 2016 ClubRunner. All Rights Reserved.
News
School Feeding Returns
 

Gros Islet Primary School - Breakfast Programme

 
 
 
 
 
 
In the photo: Rotarian Richard Spalding, Mrs. Paula St. Luce - Principal, President Lenita Joseph and two students of the Gros Islet Primary School.
 
Breakfast has always been touted to be the most important meal of the day.  It is even more important when it is served to young children who come from disadvantaged families who can scarcely afford to send these children to school, let alone feed them a wholesome, nutritious meal.
 
The Rotary Club of Gros Islet for a number of years, has been attempting to meet that need by sponsoring the feeding programmes at a number of schools including the Desbarras Primary School, Marchand Combined School, Balata Primary School and Vide Bouteille Secondary School.  Over the last year, the Gros Islet Primary School was added to that list and the sponsorship continues into this academic year.  The Programme facilitates the purchase of a number of food items such as eggs, cheese, sausages, milk, tea, chocolate drink, cornmeal, oats,  tuna and fruits and serves between 40 to 50 students monthly.  While the Programme is targeted at the children of the Primary School, some students at the Infant School also benefit when they accompany their siblings to school.
 
The Principal, Mrs. Paula St. Luce, has continued to express tremendous gratitude to the Rotary Club of Gros Islet for this initiative which, according to her, has contributed significantly to the academic improvements of a number of children.  The children are now more regular and punctual in their attendance and are more attentive in class, not distracted by starving stomachs.
 
On Friday 2nd November, 2018, President Lenita, accompanied by Rotarian Richard Spalding of Winchester Rotary shopped for and delivered food items to the Gros Islet Primary School where there were well received and welcomed by staff and students.
 
The Rotary Club of Gros Islet is pleased to be part of this initiative and hope it inspires others to reach out and make a difference in their communities also.
Read more...
Rtn. Richard to the Rescue

Winchester Rotary - Spare Parts for Kevin's Wheel Chair

In August 2017 The Winchester Rotary, through a past member, Karen McCleery, donated a motorized wheel chair to Kevin Jn. Baptiste who travels three miles every day, to and from work.
Due to Kevin, being somewhat over weight, the chair is in need of new wheels.
When Rtn Richard heard of this situation, he set in motion a rescue plan as any well oiled Navy Captain would.  He isolated the parts needed, shopped the internet, found the parts and then secured the funding.
Huge THANK YOU to Rtn. Richard and Winchester Rotary for their continued support for those in need in Saint Lucia
With parts in Hand, Richard arrived in Saint Lucia, late on Tuesday ready to hand over the parts immediately.  Due to your editor's unavailability, we only managed to get the parts to Kevin on Friday.
Kevin was truly grateful to receive the parts as he had been unable to make it to work without his chair being functional.
Read more...
News - 
It is Election time again.  Nominations for President Nominee (2020/2021) are due by Friday, 9th November.  Please send your nominations to The Secretary, Rotary Club of Gros Islet
 
Update on PP Jonathan.  He remains in hospital where the doctors are working on building back up his platelet count in order that he can travel to the UK as soon as possible.  He is very appreciative of all the well wishes and askes for our understanding that he just does not feel up to visitors. He also asked me to express his sincerest gratitude to everyone who has given blood in his name.  Jonathan remains in need of platelets therefore your help in finding blood donors is very much appreciated.
 
Membership has kicked it up a notch by producing a membership video and a new brochure.  A symposium is planned for the first week in December targeted at prospective members and new Rotarians.  
 
School Feeding has recommenced
 
Donations to PHF Simone Mondesir were handed over on November 1st.  Simone looks strong and asked me to convey her heart felt gratitude to the club and the individual members who contributed toward the cost of her medical treatment.
 
 
Read more...
OUR Rotary Foundation
 
What is The Rotary Foundation and why do we as Rotarians support our foundation, and what do we get in return?  For many years, no one took the time to explain the facts to me as a young Rotarian.  I went about my Rotary life, with a somewhat myopic view of  Rotary  and focused my attention on the projects that had local impact, those projects that I could see the outcome and feel the gratification from observing the gratitude of those whom we helped.
 
I joined Rotary in 1983 at the back end of the now virtually forgotten "Laundry Shower Unit" project where Rotary, through a Matching Grant with counterpart funds from CIDA, now defunct, built a number of these units all over the island providing the population with an alternative to using the rivers for washing cloths and self.  The worm that was infected with the schistosomiasis lives in the rivers and infected hundreds if not thousands of Saint Lucians at the time.  The sponsoring club was a the Rotary Club of Guelph, Ontario and the host Rotary club was the Rotary Club of Saint Lucia.  Not being involved in the project, I was aware of it but did not make it my own. 
 
Later in my Rotary life I would come to marvel at the power of the Rotary Foundation, and to recognize what we as Rotarians get from our contributions to support the Foundation.  Rotary Gros Islet has been involved in a number of projects that received Grant funding, but perhaps the largest was the water tank project at Plateau, Babonneau with a project cost of approximately US$200,000.  We brought water to approximately 6,000 people who had previously not had potable water near to their homes.  The impact on those persons in terms of improved Maternal and Child Health, Disease Prevention and Treatment, and Economic and Community Development was real and we were a part of it.  The educational programme that formed part of the project reached communities far away from the actual site, creating a lasting positive impact on the entire community regarding water conservation. Our contribution was less than US$2,000.
 
Read about the Rotary Foundation, it is the heart and soul of Rotary.  Donate what you can, your contribution goes further than you can imagine, nothing is too small!
 

During the past 100 years, the Foundation has spent $3 billion on life-changing, sustainable projects.

With your help, we can make lives better in your community and around the world.

Our mission

The mission of The Rotary Foundation of Rotary International is to enable Rotarians to advance world understanding, goodwill, and peace through the improvement of health, the support of education, and the alleviation of poverty.

Why should I donate to The Rotary Foundation?

Your donation makes a difference to those who need our help most. More than 90 percent of donations go directly to supporting our service projects around the world.

How does The Rotary Foundation use donations?

Our 35,000 clubs carry out sustainable service projects that support our six causes. With donations like yours, we’ve wiped out 99.9 percent of all polio cases. Your donation also trains future peacemakers, supports clean water, and strengthens local economies.

What impact can one donation have?

It can save a life. A child can be protected from polio with as little as 60 cents. Our partners make your donation go even further. For every $1 Rotary commits to polio eradication, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has committed $2.

Read more...
Rotary Quotes - November 4th 2018
Read more...
Stories
The Future of Peace

The future of peace

In its work with the United Nations and other international organizations, the Rotary Representative Network advances a century-old tradition of fostering global harmony

By Geoffrey Johnson Illustrations by Greg Clarke

In October 1991, after a 26-year career with the U.S. Foreign Service, T. Patrick Killough delivered a speech before the Rotary Club of Black Mountain in western North Carolina. The speech’s title captured his provocative premise: “The United Nations: Made in USA by Rotarians.”

To support that assertion, Killough marshaled an array of historical facts. He noted that Cordell Hull — President Franklin Roosevelt’s secretary of state, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, and the “father of the United Nations” — and several other key players in the creation of the UN had Rotary connections. What’s more, Rotarians had organized the 1942 conference in London that inspired the creation of UNESCO and, as early as 1943, had advocated for a “central world organization.” Rotary had also published and distributed pamphlets, papers, and books to educate its members about, and tacitly encourage their support of, the fledgling United Nations. 

 

“The UN is, beyond question, a thoroughly American, a thoroughly Rotarian product from beginning to end,” Killough concluded. “The United Nations is our own child.”

A member of the Black Mountain club until his death in 2014, Killough dated Rotary’s involvement with global peacebuilding to 1939. But this commitment to peace is almost as old as Rotary itself. In 1914, as war broke out in Europe, Chesley Perry, acknowledged today as Rotary’s first general secretary, wrote, “Let Rotary make International Peace and Good Will its mission as an international organization.” And in 1921 at its 12th annual convention, in Edinburgh, Scotland, Rotary vowed “to aid in the advancement of international peace” when it amended the objects, or goals, of the organization. 

"Rotary was instrumental in ... creating the United Nations.


the first dean of the Rotary Representative Network

 

Nearly a century later, Peter Kyle believes that pledge could provide the foundation for Rotary’s future. “Rotary’s peace program has the potential to have a great legacy,” he says. 

Kyle is in a position to make that vision a reality. Since 1 July, he has been dean of the Rotary Representative Network, a group of Rotarians from diverse backgrounds who represent Rotary at the United Nations and other international organizations. (For the names of the 28 representatives and their assignments, see page 49.) The network dates to 1991, when the RI Board approved a plan that included securing the highest possible consultative status for Rotary with the UN’s Economic and Social Council, which it accomplished in 1993. 

By developing connections within specific organizations, the representatives help Rotary succeed at its ambitious endeavors around the world — chief among them the eradication of polio. Its success in fighting this disease has earned Rotary tremendous credibility and sway in the arena of international problem-solving. Kyle has a strategic perspective on that. “We often complain that the world doesn’t know about Rotary’s role in eradicating polio,” he says. “The whole world doesn’t need to know. Policymakers and international organizations — they need to know. Our relationship with key senior policymakers at the United Nations and other global organizations was important for polio advocacy. I intend to maintain and deepen and expand those relationships.”

In April 1945, representatives of 50 nations gathered in San Francisco to finalize and approve the UN Charter. The United States invited 42 nongovernmental organizations to participate in the conference in an official consultative capacity.

Rotary’s 11 U.S. consultants were led by RI President Richard H. Wells, but the organization’s presence extended further. O.D.A. Oberg of the Rotary Club of Sydney, who attended the conference as a consultant to Australia’s group of representatives, reported in The Rotarian that “27 Rotarians are here as delegates or technical advisors, and five of them are chairmen of their delegations.” Many other Rotary members attended in an unofficial capacity.

“There being few UN staff at that time,” wrote David C. Forward in A Century of Service: The Story of Rotary International, “[Rotarians] guided agendas, performed translations, suggested wording for resolutions, and helped resolve disputes between delegates.” Edwin H. Futa, the first dean of the Rotary Representative Network, is even more emphatic about the organization’s impact on the conference. “Rotary,” he says, “was instrumental in helping to formulate the original documents creating the United Nations.” 

In August 1945, U.S. Secretary of State Edward R. Stettinius Jr. wrote in The Rotarian: “The invitation to Rotary International to participate in the United Nations Conference … was not merely a gesture of goodwill and respect toward a great organization. It was a simple recognition of the practical part Rotary’s members have played and will continue to play in the development of understanding among nations.” 

After the conference in San Francisco, Rotary kept working to advance public awareness of the new global peacemaking organization. It staged a United Nations Week in October 1945 (when the UN officially came into existence) and published the UN Charter, along with “interpretive comments” and questions for discussion, in From Here On!, a 96-page book that went through seven printings.

The 1930s and ’40s were the “heyday of Rotary’s influence in the world,” Kyle says. “Relative to Rotary’s size, [our role] was significant.”

As the Cold War set in, the organization’s relationship with the United Nations changed. “The UN began to be seen as very political,” says Futa, and Rotary, in his words, “took a break.” Though it never totally disengaged, it wasn’t until 1985, when PolioPlus launched, that Rotary began to re-establish an active connection with the United Nations. It also cemented its relationships with the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and other agencies and programs, paving the way for the creation of the Rotary Representative Network.   

Based on RI Board decisions, the network assumed its current size and configuration between 1991 and 2013, the year Futa was appointed its first dean. “When I came on board, the network was composed of 30 semi-independent representatives following whatever path they wanted,” he says. “I instilled a unified message coordinated with Rotary’s goal and mission.”

“As a former general secretary [2000-11], Ed knew Rotary International well and had a clear vision of it as an organization open to the world and ready to assume global responsibilities,” says Walter Gyger, the network’s primary representative to the United Nations in Geneva and the UN Economic Commission for Europe.

“Ed empowered the representatives to bring their voices to the table,” adds Jason Gonzalez, one of the network’s two youth representatives to the United Nations in New York. “He fostered a collaborative spirit that helped share Rotary’s message with a larger external audience.” 

As unofficial ambassadors, the representatives aim to enhance Rotary’s international profile while strengthening its ability to influence global events. “Given our consulting status at the UN, we’re able to participate in high-level committee meetings,” Futa says. “It’s important to have input on an issue before it goes to a vote.”

Judith Diment was named the network’s representative to the Commonwealth of Nations in 2013. Her story exemplifies the paths followed by her colleagues as they’ve worked to advance Rotary’s agenda at the highest levels of government.

“The first thing I did,” Diment says, “was to get Rotary NGO accredited status within the Commonwealth, which took more than a year.” With that in hand, she could attend meetings of Commonwealth leaders and ministers. “My priority has been to get polio eradication into (government) communiqués,” she says. “That requires considerable advocacy efforts with the UK government in London, but also with key Commonwealth countries such as Canada, India, and Australia, as well as with two endemic countries in the Commonwealth: Pakistan and Nigeria.”

As she worked to magnify Rotary’s impact on polio eradication, and on the fight against slavery and human trafficking, Diment also strove to create opportunities for Rotary leaders to consult with world figures and address international conferences, helping to build bridges with countries and organizations around the world.

That’s something Peter Kyle has been doing his whole career.

Peter Kyle first visited Washington, D.C., in 1973 as a 26-year-old lawyer from New Zealand. “This was around the time of Watergate, the Washington Post investigation, and the legal system under siege,” he recalls. “It was an exciting time for a young lawyer to be in America.”

A recipient of a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship, Kyle earned an advanced law degree from the University of Virginia before returning to practice commercial law in his native country. After a stint as legal counsel with the Asian Development Bank in the Philippines, he came back to Washington in 1992, when he joined the World Bank. “The Soviet Union had collapsed,” he explains, “and the bank was looking for lawyers with privatization experience” — something Kyle had specialized in throughout his career. He stepped down from the World Bank as lead counsel in 2009, but he continued to serve there as a consultant for another three years.

Ana Cutter Patel met Kyle around this time, when she was interviewing for the job she now holds: executive director of the Outward Bound Center for Peacebuilding. The two have remained colleagues and friends: It was at Kyle’s encouragement that Patel became a Rotary Peace Fellow, studying at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University in 2016.

“I would never have done it without Peter,” Patel says. “He’s a catalyst. He sees an opportunity for others and opens that door — or at least shows you where that door is.”

Read more...