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THE UNLEY ROTARIAN: Meeting 4138 - 19 February 2019 Website: unley.rotaryclub.org.au
 Rotary Club of Unley Inc.

 District 9520 - Chartered 17 April 1935

 President:  Trevor McGuirk: 0488 797 378
 Secretary:  Greg McLeod: BH 08 8223 3999   AH 0417 811 838
 Address:  PO Box 18, Unley SA 5061
 Email:  gmcleod@lam.com.au
 Meetings:  Tuesdays at 6.00 for 6.30pm
 Venue:
 Damien on Fisher, 123 Fisher Street, Fullarton SA
Our Rotary Them - Be the Inspiration
President Trevor McGuirk
 

NEXT TUEDAY IS THE ANNUAL LAWN BOWLS GRUDGE MATCH WITH MITCHAM...….PLEASE BRING YOUR A GAME AND JOIN IN THE FUN

Our Last Meeting

 
Venue:                         Damien on Fisher
 
Guest Speaker:           Gillian Neeson
 
Guests:                       Joe Evangelista  
    
Attendance:                20 members  2 guests
 
 

President Trevor's Announcements

  • Trevor thanked the team who had worked at Bunnings on Monday and particularly Ken Haines who continues to be a tower of strength....currently at home recovering
  • Our exciting bowls challenge next week.....we need more registrations
  • There will be a Women in Rotary meeting organised by District next Saturday at the Norwood Town Hall
  • David Middleton was thanked for his effort with the bulletin......just about able to take off the trainer wheels.
  • Effort being made to sell excess stock of fruit juices and UP&GO from the Jamboree.
  • The Rotary Shirts have arrived.....Jerry will have some explaining to do when he returns for failing to properly clad Valerie and Graham....nakedness is not an option Jerry
  • Robyn Carnachan will fill in for Jason at the Thrift Shop next Saturday
  • The fabulous Unley Under the Stars is happening next Saturday night...attend and have fun!
Bob Mills chaired the meeting.....and told a compelling political true story to round out a good night.
 

Guest Speaker: Gillian Neeson - Families4Families

Wendy Andrews first met Gillian (substituting for Julie Nunn who was suffering a bout of ill health) some 18 months ago when our club purchased a lap top to help F4F at the instigation of then member Aine Stirling from Bendigo Bank. Gillian suffered a severe brain injury after falling from her horse in 2013. With help from her family, friends and F4F Gillian has continued to recover and become a volunteer to help others. Yesterday she was with a northern group discussing how effective this form of moral and practical support can be in helping people to return to a life worth living.

F4F is a peer support network for people with acquired brain injury. A video was shown which explained the accident and the impact on Gillian's life. It is really difficult for people who have not experienced this challenge to understand. Lack of self worth, loss of confidence, panic attacks and severe depression are all too common.

Familes4 Families was established in 2010 by a person who had been involved in a traumatic car crash. He saw the need to set up a network of support for sufferers and their families using the experience of those who had been themselves affected. Gillian volunteers 2 days each week. In 2013 there were three support groups in action in Adelaide; today there are 20, spread into country towns. 

It takes a lifetime to relearn the skills lost through brain injury. Speech is a major issue.....word formulation is hard. In Gillian's case there are some senses which will not be recaptured eg smell, taste, hunger, and balance. She was an accountant but cannot return to that profession. It was not practical to continue with her passion for horses.....they have been replaced by chickens and cats.

F4F has 600 members including researchers from Flinders Uni. A challenge for her and her peers was to have NDIS give people suffering brain injury due consideration......initially excluded. The next challenge is that NDIS insurance cuts out at age 65 and responsibility is then assigned to the aged care sector.

Gillian was applauded for her wonderful presentation.

Spots

Mavis Martin reported that Vera Holt's mum, who was very close to Vera, had died recently. Mavis sent a condolence message on behalf of the club. Trevor will inform funeral details when finalised.
Sorel gave Mavis a hug....sisterhood in action
 

The Finale

Geoff Hill aint no card sharp but still managed to snare the first prize with a lousy 6 of diamonds...there is no justice. Stephen provided a positive reflection on he and Beverley's trip to Sri Lanka.....the place to go before it gets over-run by too many bloody tourists.
Tonight we were blessed with olives galore and John Peacham hates olives......there is a moral to this story but the editor is yet to find it.
 
The Prez finally nailed it.....after consistently keeping members from their favourite TV soapies and reality shows he redeemed himself by closing the meeting with 7.5 minutes to spare.
 

Upcoming Events

The Annual Bowls Match against RC Mitcham at Hawthorn Bowling Club on 26 February
 
The Combined Group 6 Dinner at The Marche Club on 2 April 2019.

Rotary News

Empowering women in Colombian prisons

Exercise class.

Charlie Ruth Castro leads an exercise class for inmates.

 

 

 

 

By Charlie Ruth Castro, Rotary E-Club of Sogamoso Global, Colombia

I had to go to prison to understand how education for innovation is the path for empowering millions of Latin American and Caribbean women economically. I’ve never committed a crime; I belong to that group of people who believe education is the most sophisticated tool we have to opening any door.

In 2016, I founded MujeresConDerechos.org with the idea of reminding society that all girls and all women are powerful. For this reason, I have dedicated myself to gathering the most influential leaders through summits, marches, and a television program. The attention and support I have received has been converted into generating innovative programs for girls and women most in need.

We had an amazing opportunity in October 2017 to put into practice the methodology of innovation I had created at Harvard University and that I had successfully tested with 1,500 youths living in rural areas of Mexico and Colombia. Now, I would be able to test my theories with 170 women in a medium-security prison in Sogamoso, within Boyacá.

The first day we visited them, the other women who went with me left terrified. A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. However, I insisted we return and begin our program, “Nuevos Comienzos Innovando” (Innovative New Beginnings). The first two months, we dedicated ourselves to working with them on the concepts of confidence, forgiveness, strength, peace, and leadership.

It was incredible to see over a short period of time how these ladies went from being hermits and melancholy, to participating and hopeful with our process. By 22 December 2017, we were capable of laughing, crying, and hugging while we planned powerful goals for a better future.

A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily.

My methodology for digital empowerment bases itself on a very simple principle: we are all capable of seeing ourselves as superheroes through the use of innovation when we put our strength to resolving the more general and common problems affecting our community.

These ladies have come to understand that the three problems most affecting women in prison are their separation from their children, the lack of information regarding staying healthy in a highly unhealthy space, and interpersonal disputes about debts owed, that end in shocking punishments, such as the infamous “dungeon” – a dark, cold, and repugnant space where they could be held for up to 72 hours.

With these women, I’ve had the most profound discussions about justice, the economy of crime, liberty, and transcendence. The methodology we used has inspired them to plan their own brand and line of beauty products made from organic herbs. Those least interested in these persons having a decent job and re-entering society are the public servants of the National Penitentiary and Prison Institute of Columbia. The challenges, as well as humiliation, they have produced for the team and the women of our program are innumerable. But advocating for a more just society demands arming yourself with patience, and being creative in order to focus on the solutions and not the problems.

The majority of the women who took part in my program arrived at this prison due to crimes such as drug microtrafficking and theft; some landed here for homicide, kidnapping, or extortion. Almost all of them are mothers, and nearly a third of them are the second generation in their families to commit a crime. Most come from rural areas and bands of poverty within medium-sized cities. Almost all of them chased the fantasy of making money and becoming self-sufficient via the activities that led them to crime. A great many of them know their legal past will mark them and if they do not learn appropriate work skills or work on themselves from within, they are condemned to repeat the same mistake on the outside.

However there are two things that almost all these women share: they come from an impoverished Colombia and they face a culture that is violent against girls and women. My team and I feel grateful these women allowed us to research and work on a reality that affects so many. Despite how difficult it is to believe, we have concluded prisons are where we will find the potential to transform the country. Yes – impossible to believe, but they are.

The women in this prison made it possible for me to understand that the inequality and violence we see in the world today has its origins in gender inequality and lack of access to an empowering education for millions of girls and women.

It is time to invest in the education of innovation for our girls and young women. If we equip them with the tools that allow them to understand problems as opportunities for solution, or go as far as to teach them to use new technologies to create sources of employment, and to achieve excellence in the jobs of today and tomorrow, we can secure their economic empowerment, and we will be supporting the innovative and sustainable industrialization of our countries.

Charlie Ruth was one of six young innovators recognized during Rotary Day at the United Nations in Nairobi, Kenya, in November.

 

Our Upcoming Meetings

 
Tuesday 26 February 2019 The long awaited triumph against RC Mitcham at the annual lawn bowling contest
  • 6 for 6.30pm
  • Hawthorn Bowling Club, 86A Monmouth Road, Hawthorn
  • Flat shoes please
  • Cost $25 for BBQ meal plus $5 green fees for those playing bowls......please bring cash
Any practice beforehand would be eminently beneficial
 
Tuesday 5 March 2019 6 for 6.30pm at Damien on Fisher 
Guest Speaker: Rod Hook   Transforming Our State
Chair: Bob Mills | Set-up, Welcome & Attendance: Ken Haines and Rachel Harding
 
Tuesday 12 March 2019 6pm at Adelaide Oval
Tour of Adelaide Oval - cost $20 and dinner after at Cathedral Hotel

Combined Group 6 Dinner - Save the Date!

Combined Group 6 Dinner
 
Tuesday 2nd April 2019 at 6.30 for 7.00pm
 
Featuring a presentation from our special guests
 
Melissa, Lisa, Ashley, Susanne and Cutter
 
the Group Study Exchange Team from Kansas City, Missouri.
 
Venue: The Marche Club, Cnr Darley and Gorge Roads, Paradise
 
2 course dinner, open bar, cost $42 per person
 
Closing date for bookings 23rd March 2019
 
 
 
Apologies normally to: Jerry Casburn by e-mail jerry@thecasburns.com.au or 0407 646 396 but until 9 March to Sorel Coward at sorel@sorelcoward.com.au or 0408 406 558
 
Meeting Enquiries to: Secretary Greg McLeod on 0417 811 838 or email to unley.secretary@rotaryclub.org.au
 
Venue Set-up Enquiries to: Bulletin Editor Stephen Baker on 0403 687 015
 

Saturday Thrift Shop Roster

Early Shift: 10.00am to 1.00pm    Late Shift: 1.00pm to 4.00pm 
 
Week 1: 2 March 2019
Early: Vera Holt & Valerie Bonython (Jerry Casburn)  |  Late: Heather Kilsby (Robyn Carnachan) & Rachel Harding
 
Week 2: 9 March 2019
Early: Greg Mcleod & Chad Leader |  Late: Wendy Andrews & Heather Kilsby 
 
Week 3: 16 March 2019
Early: David Middleton & Nathan White  |  Late: Pam Trimmer & Ken Haines 
 
Week 4: 23 February 2019
Early: Stephen Baker & Judi Corcoran |  Late:  Wendy Andrews (Rhonda Hoare) & Robyn Carnachan (Jason Booth)
 
Week 5
Early: Bob Mullins & Wendy Andrews |  Late: Jerry Casburn & Reno Elms
 
Rotarians, who are unable to attend as rostered, please arrange a swap or as a very last resort contact: Pam Trimmer (T) 8293 2612; (M) 0415 238 333; e-mail: pamela.trimmer@bigpond.com
 

Bunnings Mile End Barbeque

ALL the Bunnings Mile End Barbeque shifts are from 8am to 5pm
Next Date: Monday  18 March
Morning shift: 8.00am – 12.30pm | Afternoon shift: 12.30 – 5pm

The next Mitre 10 BBQ (now first Saturday of each month) will be on 2 March

 

The Tale End.……

This is strategic brilliance 

And there's more!

 

Your education continues with the return of the editor

  • Mental backup in progress - Do Not Disturb!
  • Quantum Mechanics: The dreams stuff is made of.
  • Robin Hood was a terrorist.
  • Seen it all, done it all, can't remember most of it.
  • Shake well before and after use.
  • Support bacteria - they're the only culture some people have.
  • Televangelists: The Pro Wrestlers of religion.
  • The only substitute for good manners is fast reflexes.
  • When everything's coming your way, you're in the wrong lane.
  • The hardness of the butter is proportional to the softness of the bread.