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ROTARY AROUND THE

WORLD

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USA

The Rotary Club of Patchogue in New York has raised more than $138,000 over the past ​dozen years by feting civic and business leaders in rollicking style. The most recent soiree, ​held in March to roughly coincide with St. Patrick’s Day, attracted nearly 250 guests.


Attendees paid $125 each for food and drinks and to listen to friends and relatives roast ​local celebrities.


“There were some slightly embarrassing stories of their childhood and baby pictures,” says ​Paul Moran, a club member and organizer. A band featuring Moran and other Rotarians ​performed cover tunes to help lead the merriment.


More than $17,000 was donated to the Patchogue Community Service Foundation, ​principally for youth services, including Camp Pa-Qua-Tuck, a residential program for people ​with disabilities that is operated by Rotary District 7255.


Rotary Club of Patchogue, New York

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United Kingdom

Christopher Hill was diagnosed with a heart condition at age 38. A past president of the ​Rotary Club of Bolton Lever in Greater Manchester, he has since become an advocate for ​automated external defibrillators.


In 2022, Hill’s club joined five other Bolton-area Rotary clubs to purchase a nearly $1,900 ​defibrillator for the Bolton Steam Museum.


“When you are out there in the countryside, you can be miles and even hours from one,” but ​when needed, Hill says, “it is needed in minutes.”


Hill takes to area trails as leader of a walking group, prompting the Bolton Lever club to ​acquire a portable, single-use defibrillator that Hill carries on the treks. All 33 club members ​have attended training sessions and refresher courses on how to operate the machines.


Rotary Club of Bolton Lever, Greater Manchester

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Canada

About 200 college students, faculty, and community members took turns swinging baseball ​bats at junkyard vehicles during a Car Smash for Charity event organised by the Rotaract ​Club of Vancouver-University of British Columbia.


The fund-raiser, held each of the past three years before final exams, “offers people a fun ​way to relieve stress or test their own strength, while supporting a wonderful cause,” says ​Sara Lee, a past co-president of the club.


The event, held on the campus quad in April, raised more than $2,200 Canadian for ​education-related endeavors. A scrap car company delivered a Volkswagen and a Chevrolet ​and collected the remnants afterward for recycling. “Our team is continually amazed at the ​response the event receives,” Lee says.


Rotaract Club of Vancouver-University, British Columbia

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Italy

Brushes and rollers in hand, members of the Rotary Club of Torino Lagrange converged on a ​youth centre to supply a fresh coat of paint.


The club members spent a weekend in April and about $1,500 sprucing up the facility, which ​offers counseling services and a gathering place for people ages 14 to 28.


“The aim is to help young people overcome difficult moments and face changes in a ​welcoming, confidential, and judgement-free environment,” says club member Raffaele ​Battaglini. The club partnered with students at an arts high school who made paintings for ​the center.


Rotary Club of Torino Lagrange

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India

The Rotary Club of Bombay Seacoast staged a concert and high tea reception in May for ​about 150 veterans injured in duty and their families. Club members tapped their ​connections with local celebrities, among them the emcee, Neeta Mirchandani, the wife of ​club member and singer Vijay Mirchandani.


“The jawans (soldiers) participated with full joy and excitement as several kept dancing and ​clapping to the music, with the families of many joining in toward the end,” says Sampath ​Iyengar, a past club president.


“Some of the jawans seated on chairs or in wheelchairs participated as a mark of solidarity, ​their chairs lifted by their fellow jawans who still had strength in their arms, love in their ​hearts, and deep empathy for their fellow ex-soldiers without limbs.”


Rotary Club of Bombay Seacoast

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