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ROTARY AROUND THE

WORLD

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Belize

The Rotaract Club of Belize City is renovating a rural school and a Rotary club-sponsored ​park as part of its youth-focused agenda.


In April, club members met at the Hattieville Government Preschool to paint restrooms and ​complete other beautification work. A later phase will include new toilets.


“We’ve been able to replace chalkboards in 10 classrooms with whiteboards and to donate a ​printer and other school and hygiene materials,” says Kristoff Nicholson, immediate past ​president.


The club partnered with a telecom provider and raffled off smartphones to help pay for the ​project. It also received a District 4250 grant of $1,000.


In March, club members replaced basketball and goal nets and painted benches and a ​playset at Love Park in Balama, another element of the project, Nicholson says.


Rotary Club of Belize City

A group of volunteers refurbishing a blue school building
the flag of colombia

Colombia

In January, the Rotary Club of Cúcuta-Ciudad de Arboles purchased about $600 of school ​supplies and delivered 100 sets of notebooks, pencils, pens, erasers, sharpeners, and more ​to students in the city. It’s about 350 miles northeast of Bogotá.


Club members also visited with students in the neighbourhood of Las Delicias, says Dora ​Patricia Lobo, a past president of the club.


“The hustle and bustle and joy of these students when they receive their school package ​warms our souls and encourages us to continue,” Lobo says. More than 1,400 students have ​benefited since the project began.


Rotary Club of Cúcuta-Ciudad de Arboles

A person carrying a box of food in front of a van
a person in a blue Rotary shirt handing a package to a young person
the flag of Liberia

Liberia

The Rotary Club of Monrovia is helping train young women to establish microenterprises to ​make and sell reusable sanitary pads and address “period poverty.”


With financial support from the Rotary Club of Loveland, Colorado, the Liberian Rotarians ​paired with the nonprofit Dignity:Liberia and held two training sessions for 200 women ​earlier this year in Monrovia, the capital, and in Kakata, a semirural community.


“The high, recurring cost of pads makes them out of reach for many families that struggle to ​make ends meet,” says Monique Cooper-Liverpool, a past president of the Monrovia club. ​“This leads thousands of girls to miss classes so often that they eventually drop out of ​school.”


The initiative grew out of a partnership between the two clubs to advance reproductive care ​and treatment for fistulas, an injury often caused by prolonged labor during childbirth.


Rotary Clubs of Monrovia, Liberia and Loveland, Colorado

A group of women sit around a table participating in a workshop
A group of women each undertaking a sewing activity
the flag of thailand

Thailand

About 1,500 drowning deaths occur each year in Thailand, one of the highest rates per ​capita in the world. While the Thai government is working to prevent fatalities, drowning ​remains the leading cause of death for those 15 and younger in the country, which has ​thousands of miles of coastline.


On the island of Samui, a popular tourist destination, there are no public swimming pools, ​says Adam Preston, immediate past president of the Rotary Club of Samui-Phangan. Club ​members received training from the Rotary Club of Global Water Safety and Drowning ​Prevention and in 2019 started Swim4Life, a series of lessons for children ages 10 to 12 at an ​international school’s pool.


Three Samui-Phangan club members offer basic instruction alongside 15 community ​members who serve as assistant teachers.


Nearly 100 children had completed the course as of April. The children, from public schools, ​“have gone from being scared of the water to being able to swim 25 meters,” Preston says.


Rotary Club of Samui-Phangan

a group of people swimming in a pool
a group of people posing for a photo in front of a sign that says "rotary swim team"
the flag of Northern Ireland

Northern Ireland

Volunteers led by the Rotary Club of Belfast made improvements to the courtyard garden of ​a senior home in January. The team of Rotarians, community members, and people in ​transitional employment through the judicial system cleared weeds, constructed raised ​garden platforms, and filled them with soil.


Cold temperatures scaled back their plans, but it was still a “rather back-breaking” effort, ​says club member Jenny Boyd. A District 1160 grant of about $1,250 was used to underwrite ​the expense.


Karen Blair, a past president and project leader, recruited colleagues from her law firm to ​get a little dirt under their fingernails. “This project allows all members to be involved in a ​very hands-on activity,” Blair says. “And even those with no gardening ability can participate ​by chatting with the residents over coffee.”


Rotary Club of Belfast

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a person using a pair of gardening shears to trim a hedge
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