ROTARY FRIENDSHIP EXCHANGE
An interesting
Rotary program of fellowship is the Rotary Friendship
Exchange. This activity, originally recommended by the
New Horizons Committee in 1981, is intended to encourage
Rotarians and spouses to visit with Rotarian families in
other parts of the world. It may be conducted on a
club-to-club or district-to-district basis.
The idea is for
several Rotarian couples to travel to another country on
the Rotary Friendship Exchange. Later the hospitality is
reversed when the visit is exchanged. After a successful
pilot experiment, the Rotary Friendship Exchange has
become a permanent program of Rotary.
The Rotary
Friendship Exchange is frequently compared to the Group
Study Exchange program of The Rotary Foundation, except
that it involves Rotarian couples who personally pay for
all expenses of their intercountry experience. Doors of
friendship are opened in a way which could not be
duplicated except in Rotary.
Rotarians seeking
an unusual vacation and fellowship experience should
learn more about the Rotary Friendship Exchange. Some
unusual Rotary adventures are awaiting you!
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Each summer
thousands of young people are selected to attend
Rotary-sponsored leadership camps or seminars in the
United States, Australia, Canada, India, France,
Argentina, Korea and numerous other countries. In an
informal out-of-doors atmosphere, 50 to 75 outstanding
young men and/or women spend a week in a challenging
program of discussions, inspirational addresses,
leadership training and social activities designed to
enhance personal development, leadership skills and good
citizenship. The official name of this activity is the
Rotary Youth Leadership Awards program (RYLA), although
the event is occasionally referred to as Camp Royal, Camp
Enterprise, Youth Leaders Seminars, Youth Conferences or
other terms.
The RYLA program
began in Australia in 1959, when young people throughout
the state of Queensland were selected to meet with
Princess Alexandra, the young cousin of Queen Elizabeth
II. The Rotarians of Brisbane, who hosted the
participants, were impressed with the quality of the
young leaders. It was decided to bring youth leaders
together each year for a week of social, cultural and
educational activities. The RYLA program gradually grew
throughout all the Rotary districts of Australia and New
Zealand. In 1971, the RI Board of Directors adopted RYLA
as an official program of Rotary International.
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One of the newer
programs in Rotary's panoply of worldwide service
activities and projects is the Rotary Village Corps. This
new form of grass roots self-help service was initiated
by RI President M.A.T. Caparas in 1986 as a means of
improving the quality of life in villages, neighborhoods
and communities. Frequently there is an abundance of
available labor, but no process to mobilize men and women
to conduct useful projects of community improvement.
A Rotary Village
Corps-or Rotary Community Corps as they are called in
industrialized countries-is a Rotary club-sponsored group
of non-Rotarians who desire to help their own community
by conducting a specific improvement project. The Rotary
members provide the guidance, encouragement,
organizational structure and some of the material
assistance for the Rotary Village Corps, which in turn
contributes the manpower to help their own community.
Thus, the Rotary Village Corps provides a totally new
process for Rotarians to serve in communities of great
need.
Rotary Community
Corps have been organized mainly in depressed ghetto
areas of major cities where groups of individuals need
the organizational and managerial skills of Rotarians to
undertake valuable self-help community projects.
The Rotary Village
Corps program offers a totally new dimension to the
concept of service to improve the quality of life.
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Interact, the
Rotary youth program, was launched by the RI Board of
Directors in 1962. The first Interact club was
established by the Rotary Club of Melbourne, Florida.
Interact clubs provide opportunities for boys and girls
of secondary school age to work together in a world
fellowship of service and international understanding.
The term, Interact, is derived from "inter" for
international, and "act" for action. Every
Interact club must be sponsored and supervised by a
Rotary club and must plan annual projects of service to
its school, community and in the world.
Today there are
over 7,200 Interact clubs with more than 155,000 members
in 88 countries. "Interactors" develop skills
in leadership and attain practical experience in
conducting service projects, thereby learning the
satisfaction that comes from serving others. A major goal
of Interact is to provide opportunities for young people
to create greater understanding and goodwill with youth
throughout the world.
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After the success
of Interact clubs for high school-age youth in the early
1960s, the RI board created Rotaract in 1968. The new
organization was designed to promote responsible
citizenship and leadership potential in clubs of young
men and women, aged 18 to 30. The first Rotaract club was
chartered by the Charlotte North Rotary Club in
Charlotte, North Carolina. In 1994 there were more than
149,000 members in more than 6,500 Rotaract clubs in 107
countries.
Rotaract clubs
emphasize the importance of individual responsibility as
the basis of personal success and community involvement.
Each club sponsors an annual project to promote high
ethical standards in one's business and professional
life. Rotaract also provides opportunities leading to
greater international understanding and goodwill.
Rotaractors enjoy many social activities as well as
programs to improve their community. A Rotaract club can
exist only when continuously sponsored, guided and
counseled by a Rotary club. The programs of Rotaract are
built around the motto "Fellowship Through
Service."
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The Rotary
International float in the annual Tournament of Roses
Parade is undoubtedly the largest public relations
project of the Rotary clubs of the United States and
Canada. Since 1924 a Rotary float has been entered 18
times including every year since 1981. The famous
Pasadena, California, parade is seen by an estimated 125
million people via worldwide television.
Funds for the
construction of the Rotary parade entry are voluntarily
given by Rotarians and clubs in the U.S. and Canada. The
cost of designing, constructing and flower covering a
Rose Parade float begins at about $120,000.
A multi-district
Rotary committee in Southern California coordinates
planning of the Rotary float and provides hundreds of
volunteer hours of service. The Rotary float must portray
the annual parade theme, usually depicting one of the
worldwide service programs of Rotary International.
Each New Year's
Day, Rotarians take pride in seeing their attractive
float and realize they have shared in its construction by
contributing a dollar or two to this beautiful public
relations project.
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- Rotary first
presented "Significant Achievement
Awards" in 1969 to clubs with outstanding
international or community services projects.
- Rotary's first
Interact club was organized in Melbourne,
Florida, in 1962 to become the pioneer for about
7,200 Interact clubs in 88 countries.
- Rotary's first
convention held in the Southern Hemisphere was in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1948.
- Rotary was
assigned the copyright on the "4-Way
Test" in 1954 when its author, Herbert
Taylor, became president of Rotary International.
- Rotary's first
Community Service project took place in 1907 when
Chicago Rotarians led a campaign to install a
public "comfort station" in the city
hall.
- 1964-65 was
the first year when The Rotary Foundation
received total contributions of a million dollars
in a single year. Today more than $45 million is
given annually. Contributions since 1917 total
more than $750 million.
- Rotary's first
appeal for aid to disaster victims was in 1913
when $25,000 was given for flood relief in Ohio
and Indiana.
- Rotary's
motto, "He Profits Most Who Serves
Best," was first expressed at Rotary's very
first Convention in Chicago in 1910.
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