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What is Rotary
Our club is one of more than 30.000 clubs in the world that offers our members fellowship
and a special way to serve the community in which we are living. We are part of the Rotary
International, present in 160 countries worldwide. We like to think of us as an
open-minded, friendly, informal and international.
Our present members are coming from Armenia, Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britain,
Hungary, Italy, Japan, Serbia, Spain, Russia.
We are delighted to meet new prospective members, guests and visiting Rotarians at our
meetings.
We love to have fun at our special meetings, we enjoy good food, good story and good
fellowship.
Rotary club membership represents a cross-section of the community's business and
professional men and women. The world's Rotary clubs meet weekly and are nonpolitical,
nonreligious, and open to all cultures, races, and creeds.
The main objective of Rotary is service - in the community,
in the workplace, and throughout the world. Rotarians develop community service projects
that address many of today's most critical issues, such as children at risk, poverty and
hunger, the environment, illiteracy, and violence. They also support programs for youth,
educational opportunities and international exchanges for students, teachers, and other
professionals, and vocational and career development.
The Rotary motto is "Service Above Self".
Members of a Rotary club are part of a diverse group of
professional leaders working to address various community and international service needs
and to promote peace and understanding throughout the world. Our members are our most
important asset. They are the force that allows Rotary to carry out its many humanitarian
efforts and achieve its mission.
The world's first service club, the Rotary Club of Chicago,
Illinois, USA, was formed on 23 February 1905 by Paul P. Harris, an attorney who
wished to recapture in a professional club the same friendly spirit he had felt in the
small towns of his youth.
The name "Rotary" derived from the early practice
of rotating meetings among members' offices. Rotary's popularity spread throughout the
United States in the decade that followed; clubs were chartered from San Francisco to New
York.
By 1921, Rotary clubs had been formed on six continents,
and the organization adopted the name Rotary International a year later. As Rotary grew,
its mission expanded beyond serving the professional and social interests of club members.
Rotarians began pooling their resources and contributing their talents to help serve
communities in need.
The organization's dedication to this ideal is best
expressed in its principal motto: Service Above Self. Rotary also later embraced a code of
ethics, called The 4-Way Test, that has been translated into hundreds of languages.
During and after World War II, Rotarians became
increasingly involved in promoting international understanding. A Rotary conference held
in London in 1942 planted the seeds for the development of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), and numerous Rotarians have served as
consultants to the United Nations. An endowment fund, set up by Rotarians in 1917
"for doing good in the world," became a not-for-profit corporation known as The
Rotary Foundation in 1928.
Upon the death of Paul Harris in 1947, an outpouring of
Rotarian donations made in his honor, totaling US$2 million, launched the Foundation's
first program - graduate fellowships, now called Ambassadorial Scholarships. Today,
contributions to The Rotary Foundation total more than US$80 million annually and support
a wide range of humanitarian grants and educational programs that enable Rotarians to
bring hope and promote international understanding throughout the world.
In 1985, Rotary made a historic commitment to immunize all
of the world's children against polio. Working in partnership with nongovernmental
organizations and national governments thorough its PolioPlus program, Rotary is the
largest private-sector contributor to the global polio eradication campaign. Rotarians
have mobilized hundreds of thousands of PolioPlus volunteers and have immunized more than
one billion children worldwide. By the 2005 target date for certification of a polio-free
world, Rotary will have contributed half a billion dollars to the cause.
As it approached the dawn of the 21st century, Rotary
worked to meet the changing needs of society, expanding its service effort to address such
pressing issues as environmental degradation, illiteracy, world hunger, and children at
risk.
The organization admitted women for the first time in 1989
and claims more than 90,000 women in its ranks today. Following the collapse of the Berlin
Wall and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Rotary clubs were formed or re-established
throughout Central and Eastern Europe. Today, 1.2 million Rotarians belong to some 30,000
Rotary clubs in more than 160 countries. |
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