Showing posts with label rotary international. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rotary international. Show all posts

Saturday, May 24, 2025

Exhibit documents the scope of polio eradication efforts worldwide

 

Exhibit documents the scope of polio eradication efforts worldwide

By 

Jean-Marc Giboux

Image credit: Monika Lozinska

The exhibit “Chasing Polio,” on display at the Chicago Center for Photojournalism in Chicago, USA, through 29 May, captures an extraordinary 18-year journey. Photographer Jean-Marc Giboux traveled to 17 countries to document the effects of polio and the wide-ranging fight to eradicate it. He spoke with Rotary International, a sponsor of the exhibit, about his favorite photos, his most challenging ordeals, and how a Rotary member helped him at a crucial moment.

Q: How did you become interested in photographing polio eradication efforts?

A: In 1997, I was looking for a good story about our entry into the 21st century. I saw a story in the Chicago Tribune about Rotary and polio eradication, so I called Rotary and said, “I’d like to do a story. How can we do this?” We talked for a long time, and ultimately The Rotary Foundation gave me a grant to document this work. The next year, the photos were published in Life magazine, and a week later the World Health Organization asked me if I wanted to go to Sierra Leone for them. I had no idea I was getting into this for 18 years. It just happened.

Q: Are there particular countries where it’s easier or harder to photograph people?

A: I’ve been going to India for 25 years, so I’m very comfortable in India. I can find my way around, and Indian people are pretty good about being photographed. I went there probably 10 times. Afghanistan and Pakistan were more difficult. In Afghanistan, you need a translator, and it can be difficult from a security standpoint.

Q: Is it hard to photograph polio eradication work in general?

A: The experience of photographing polio vaccination was usually very positive. You arrive in places where there is poverty, there is war, and you’re coming in with a group of people who are simply there to help. I got a pretty good reception everywhere.

Q: What are your favorite photos in the exhibition?

A: There’s one picture from Sierra Leone of a group of kids sitting together in a home for disabled children. I love that picture. You know, they are just school kids.

Insulated ice boxes set out to dry at a health center. One main challenge in any immunization campaign is maintaining a cold chain, which means keeping vaccines at the right temperature from when they’re produced until they’re used. Delhi, India, 2004.

Courtesy of Jean-Marc Giboux

There’s another picture, of this guy walking with a cooler [in Afghanistan]. I would spend my day following the immunization workers going door to door. That was in 2002, when I was able to do this without a police escort. After that it became dangerous.

Q: Were there times when your alliance with Rotary helped you get the photos you wanted?

A: On my very first morning in Kano, in northern Nigeria, I went out to take pictures. I didn’t take a single picture before I got arrested for having a camera. Two big guys just got me. Then I saw a policeman in uniform. I ran to him and asked, “Are these people legit?” and he said, “Yes, they are immigration [police]” or something. So I went with them in their car.


Nurses and health workers gather at the Fara Block Community Health Center in India to celebrate the first anniversary of the country being certified polio-free. Mathura, India, 2015.
Children pray before classes begin at Akshya Pratisthan. The private institution provides rehabilitation in an environment where children with disabilities (caused primarily by polio) and children without disabilities live and learn together. New Delhi, India, 2004.
In 2004, India’s last polio ward, in St. Stephen's Hospital in Delhi, provides reconstructive surgery for people who have been paralyzed by polio. Delhi, India, 2004.
Food is distributed in the Maslakh refugee camp. Herat province, Afghanistan, 2002.
A Pashtun father with his child during Afghanistan’s National Immunization Days. Government health workers went door to door in the villages of the Zinda Jan district to administer polio vaccine. Herat province, Afghanistan, 2002.
A government health worker goes door to door in the villages of the Zinda Jan district during the National Immunization Days in Afghanistan. Herat province, Afghanistan, 2002.
Children affected by polio find refuge from Sierra Leone’s civil war at the Freetown Cheshire Home. Freetown, Sierra Leone, 1998.
A mother takes her child to a polio vaccination center in the midst of civil war in Sierra Leone. A government soldier guards the road that leads out of town, toward the conflict’s front line. Freetown, Sierra Leone, 1998.
Children affected by polio in line in the schoolyard at the Amar Jyoti Research & Rehabilitation Centre. At the school, children with and without disabilities learn together. Delhi, India, 1998.
A child affected by polio plays at a facility managed by the charitable organization Cheshire Ethiopia. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 1997.

They took my passport, and for two days I was not able to get out of the hotel. But a Rotarian, the local president of the Rotary club in Kano, kind of negotiated for me. He never told me what he did, but he got my passport back.

Q: Did you anticipate challenges like that when you began taking polio pictures?

A: I had no idea what I was getting into. The first place I went was Ethiopia, and I wanted to go into the south to see some tribal areas. It was the rainy season, and we got stuck in the mud in the middle of the night. I was able to photograph the vaccinations, but it took me around three days to get back. That was the reality. In the same way I made my way there, the polio vaccine had to get there. It was quite interesting to see the difficulty. Putting two drops of vaccine in the mouth of a kid is not that difficult. Making it happen is the difficult part.

Learn more about Rotary’s polio eradication efforts.

Visit :-

https://www.rotary.org/en/photographer-reflects-18-years-chasing-polio





President Stephanie Urchick is ready to lead Rotary toward another winning season

 

President Stephanie Urchick is ready to lead Rotary toward another winning season

By Photography by 

An avid Steelers fan, Urchick met the team’s vice president, Art Rooney Jr., when he spoke to her Rotary club.

It’s a frigid January night, the second in a row to dip below zero degrees Fahrenheit in Chicago.

Schools are closed, events canceled, flights grounded. Outside an arctic blast is howling, but inside Stephanie Urchick’s condo, the party is sizzling.

Urchick wears jeans and a Pittsburgh Steelers T-shirt with a “Magic of Rotary” pin affixed. Draped over one of her shoulders is a “Terrible Towel,” an iconic yellow dish towel-size piece of fabric that stalwart fans of the American football team wave to rally their team. The occasional cheer or groan punctuates the party’s chatter.

This playoff game between the Steelers and the Buffalo Bills has already been rescheduled once because of the dangerous winter weather sweeping across the United States. A group of Rotarians visiting Rotary headquarters was stuck in suburban Evanston because of a flight delay, and Urchick invited them to watch the game with her. The 2024-25 Rotary International president, Urchick has just returned from a trip to the International Assembly in Orlando. She pulls out some pierogi, a type of Polish dumpling, from her freezer and sets out beverages of all kinds for her unexpected guests.

To call Urchick a sports fan might be a Hall of Fame-worthy understatement. At her home in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, about 20 minutes outside Pittsburgh, Urchick’s basement “woman cave” is floor to ceiling Pittsburgh sports: 1990s-era cereal boxes featuring baseball great Roberto Clemente and the Stanley Cup-winning Pittsburgh Penguins hockey team; photos of her with Pittsburgh sports legends including Steelers running back Rocky Bleier, along with one of Bleier’s framed jerseys; a Steelers piggy bank; Penguins hockey pucks; a signed football; a collection of tickets; a Steelers quilt. Her most recent acquisition is a bobblehead of Pirates baseball player Richie Hebner, whose photo Urchick plastered in her high school locker. In a nearby closet hang her two favorite uniforms: her Rotary T-shirts and her Pittsburgh fan gear.

The Bills score three touchdowns in a row to open the game, making the score 21-0 by the middle of the second quarter. Urchick steps away from the group gathered in front of the television and perches behind the kitchen counter, checking her phone and the food she’s heating up in the oven.

Her enjoyment of sports extends well beyond that of a typical fan. One summer, she assisted with character analyses for Canadian Football League scouts, attending NFL training camps to watch for players who might be cut and would be a good fit for that league. (She recalls Baltimore Ravens coach John Harbaugh approaching her about her role: “I’ve never worked with a lady before!” “Well,” she replied, “I don’t bite.”) She also participated in a women’s training camp put on by the Steelers and run by former players; her experience was cut short after she snapped her Achilles tendon doing footwork drills through car tires. Didn’t matter. “It was just a fun, fun summer,” she says.

She met the vice president of the Steelers, Art Rooney Jr., when he spoke to her Rotary club. Afterward, she brought him some chocolates from Sarris Candies, a well-known confectionery founded in Canonsburg. It’s a tradition she’s continued to uphold a few times a year, the two united by their love of the game.

That kind of connection is what’s happening at the party tonight. Fellow Steelers fan René Laws, 2023-24 governor of District 7610 (Virginia), wears her #90 TJ Watt jersey for the occasion. The two met when they sat at the same table at a presidents-elect training seminar and their mutual love of the Steelers came up. “Ever since then, we would see each other at events and we would always have football and Rotary to talk about,” Laws says. The Steelers score early in the fourth quarter and pull within a touchdown of tying the game. The two laugh as they both signal a Steelers first down along with the refs.

Life couldn’t be better, unless the Steelers were actually winning, which unfortunately is not the case. Not tonight. The Bills score one more touchdown with 6:27 remaining in the game. Their fans celebrate by tossing snow in the air. The Steelers lose the game 31-17 and that’s the end of their season. But for Urchick it’s just the beginning. This year, she will get her own chance to head up a winning team: Rotary.

Club members Greg Incardona (left) and William Kern join Urchick at Acrisure Stadium, home of the Pittsburgh Steelers.

A few weeks later, Urchick gathers with family back in western Pennsylvania for the birthday of her eldest cousin, Michael Hatalowich. The two grew up like siblings, always at each other’s houses, and they still tease each other as if brother and sister. The kitchen counter is spread with pizza and chicken wings, pasta salad, fruit, crackers, and dips, as the news plays in the background on the television in the living room. But before they eat, the dozen or so gathered — cousins and their spouses, children, and grandchildren — sing “Happy Birthday,” first in English, and then in Slavonic, harmonizing to “Mnohaja Lita,” a traditional Carpatho-Rusyn birthday song whose title means “many years.” Urchick joins in, her voice clear and strong.

Music has been a touchstone throughout Urchick’s life. Her dad played the accordion and led a polka band, the Harmoneers, for more than 35 years. “I learned to polka before I learned to walk,” she says. Urchick was a singer with her father’s band and when she’s in town, she sings with the Orthodox church choir directed by another of her cousins. “You know how some families get together and play cards?” she asks. “My father was a musician. My grandmother, my aunts, they were all singers. So when we got together, we sang.”

Urchick grew up here in western Pennsylvania, near the border of West Virginia, a countryside of forests and farms in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. Both her maternal and paternal grandparents moved here from Eastern Europe (Poland, Slovakia, and Ukraine), settling down to take advantage of the jobs in the region’s coal mines and steel mills. When she arrived in the United States, her mother knew one sentence: “Give me some potatoes.”

Urchick’s culture and her family remain important to her. Spend a bit of time with her and you’re likely to hear family lore involving a misunderstanding around beets and the power of a patron saint and stories about her visits to meet distant relatives in Eastern Europe. She gathers regularly with Hatalowich and her other maternal cousins who live nearby, and she gets together with her more far-flung paternal cousins for an annual trip.

Western Pennsylvania is part of what was once known as the Steel Belt for its steel mills and coal mines, though it’s now called the Rust Belt after the decline of those industries in the 1970s and ’80s. The population of Urchick’s childhood hometown, Monessen, peaked at around 20,000 people in the 1930s but as of 2022 had declined to less than 7,000. Rows of stores along the main street stand vacant, and there’s only one full-fledged grocery store left in town. Holy Name Cemetery, the Slovak cemetery where Urchick’s paternal grandparents are buried, is more than half empty, its pristine lawns an indication of the number of graves originally anticipated. “They’ll never fill it up,” Urchick explains, “because so many people left town.”


Urchick and Incardona relax at S&D Polish Deli in Pittsburgh. Urchick’s family immigrated to the area from Eastern Europe.

As a child, Urchick devoured Nancy Drew mystery novels and dreamed of being a spy. “I was in this little place in Pennsylvania, and I really had never gone anywhere,” she says. “I wanted to see the world.” When she went to college, she channeled that desire into a major in international relations, with its focuses on history, political science, and languages. She studied Russian, Polish, Serbian, and Italian, on top of the French she’d learned in high school. As she was finishing up college, she applied to work for the FBI, the CIA, and other U.S. intelligence agencies. But there was one obstacle: All four of her grandparents were from Eastern Europe. “Most people’s background checks take about three or four months,” she recalls. “Well, mine apparently took a year and a half.”

By the time the FBI called with a job offer, Urchick had started down a new career path as an administrator in higher education. And she loved it. She declined what had been her dream job (although she jokes that her work with Rotary is merely an elaborate cover for her cloak-and-dagger pursuits), and she went on to earn a master’s degree in education and a doctorate in leadership studies. Her dreams of an international career were back-burnered — that is until Rotary came along.

Over dinner at the birthday party, Urchick’s nephew Jeremy Layne reflects on his aunt. Layne, now 38, didn’t meet Urchick until he was a teenager, and he recalls the impact that moment eventually had on the trajectory of his life. She encouraged him to push himself toward his goals and refuse to accept “no” as an option. “The day I met her at my Baba’s [grandmother’s] house, from that day forward she has meant everything to me,” he says. “Her vibe, her energy, her spark that she gives off is just intoxicating. She’s just an amazing woman. I’m so thankful for her to be in my life.”

“She really is very authentic and very genuine,” says Rebecca Bazzar, Hatalowich’s daughter. “She could fit in anywhere, in a room full of diplomats or a room full of local yokels. Everybody loves her and she’s going to have a good time everywhere she goes.” Bazzar leans over and in a conspiratorial whisper adds, “You won’t meet anyone more fun than her.”

The dozen people gathered toast “Na zdravja!” and then Urchick begins the long process of hugging everybody goodbye. They discuss where she’s traveling next, her family members wishing that she stay safe. As they walk outside, she and her cousin Peter Merella, the choir director, say goodbye “their way,” in Polish. “Do widzenia.” They loosely translate: “Until we see each other again.”


Urchick mentors Kate Matz (center) of the Rotary Club of Pittsburgh. Matz and her daughter, Mason, join Urchick at Sarris Candies.

The next morning, as she walks into a side room at a diner in Canonsburg, Urchick is welcomed by hoots and applause from the couple dozen Rotary members seated along a string of tables. But it isn’t just Urchick who’s cheered as she enters the room. It’s the greeting that every member gets when arriving for a meeting of the Rotary Club of McMurray, Urchick’s home club.

The tradition started a few years ago when someone arrived late to the meeting. Everybody cheered — and it caught on. Now no matter when they arrive at the meeting, all members are greeted as if they’re the president of an international organization. “How could you not feel good?” Urchick says.

She hugs William Kern, the club president, and the meeting starts. It’s a breakfast meeting, and the smell of toast permeates the air. The table is a jumble of coffee mugs and carafes, empty cups of half-and-half, and water glasses. The food begins to arrive, classic diner fare including French toast, bagel sandwiches, hash browns, and oatmeal. Urchick isn’t much of a breakfast eater and sticks to decaf coffee.

For years, the club had been stuck at around 35 members, Urchick says. But it used Rotary’s Action Plan to take a look at itself with new eyes. Club leaders asked every member about the club’s performance — things such as the club meeting day, time, and location, and club projects. With that information, they determined that meeting at a different time of day might work for more people and switched from a lunch club to breakfast. “Instantly, and I mean instantly, we had two new people come into the club,” Urchick says. “They said they were invited before but could never come.”

The club didn’t stop there. Members talked to other groups in the area and found people who wanted to serve but didn’t want to attend club meetings. Looking into options, club leaders started a satellite club for people to do just that. The concept brought 15 new members to the club. “They pay full dues,” Urchick says. “We don’t discount anything. But we also know they’re not coming to weekly meetings.” Instead, they hold “PBR” nights, referring not to the familiar monogram of the American beer Pabst Blue Ribbon, but to “pizza, beer, and Rotary.”

Urchick’s club, the Rotary Club of McMurray, Pennsylvania, began meeting for breakfast to reach new members.

This morning’s meeting is vibrant, full of lively conversations and bursts of laughter. The cheering, the shared breakfast, the camaraderie is all part of the club’s intention to be, to borrow Urchick’s catchphrase, “simply irresistible.” “It makes my job easier talking about being a Rotarian in an active club,” she says. Being irresistible “means the experience is so compelling, so fun, so dynamic that people are drawn to it and don’t want to leave,” she adds. “At the bottom of that is the whole concept of belonging: Is this the kind of group I want to belong to?”

That was the question Urchick asked herself in 1991, when an acquaintance walked into her office at the California University of Pennsylvania and asked if she’d like to go to a Rotary club meeting. Urchick didn’t know much about Rotary, but she was recently divorced and looking for ways to meet new people. And when the woman mentioned Rotary’s internationality, something clicked.

When she went to her first meeting of the Rotary Club of California, a town south of Pittsburgh, she met Chuck Keller, a member of the club and RI’s 1987-88 president. “He introduced himself and we got to be friends quickly,” she says. “I had a built-in Rotary godfather. It was amazing.” Urchick dove in, hosting Group Study Exchange team members and pitching in with the club’s Youth Exchange students. She organized an indoor picnic complete with a three-legged sack race. “Oh, my gawd,” she says in her Pittsburgh accent, “it was hilarious.”

Urchick was drawn especially to the work of The Rotary Foundation, becoming first the Foundation chair for her club and then for her district. Later, at the zone level, she served as a regional Rotary Foundation coordinator, focusing on fund development. She worked with Lou Piconi, another Pittsburgh-area Rotarian who had served Rotary on the international level as both a director and trustee, to train what they called “major donor possibility teams,” groups of five to seven people who focused on fundraising for The Rotary Foundation. “Lou and his wife, Barbara, and I would get in his big red Cadillac,” she says, and travel around the region. “We had a great time.”

Her work with the Foundation meant more people got to know her and led to a 5 a.m. phone call in 2012. Her name had been put forward to replace Anne Matthews as a Rotary Foundation trustee. (Matthews left her post to join the Rotary Board of Directors.) Later, Urchick became a director herself and led the organization’s Strategic Planning Committee, a role that proved pivotal to shaping her thinking about how to move Rotary into a thriving future.

Given Urchick’s background in international relations, her interest in peace as another of her priorities as president likely comes as no surprise. She encourages living The Four-Way Test, investing in a positive club culture, and engaging with Rotary Peace Centers as ways members can help spread the message of Rotary’s commitment to peace. “We’re not going to get a Nobel Peace Prize for stopping a war,” Urchick says, “but we can use what we have in Rotary to make the world a better place.”


Urchick works with McMurray Club President William Kern to scout a location for a peace pole in the community.

One of the pillars of Urchick’s peace push is, well, a pillar. That afternoon after the club meeting, she joins members of the Rotary Club of White Oak at a park in the community about 15 miles southeast of Pittsburgh. It’s a gorgeous sunny day that feels like spring although it’s only early February, with a slight breeze on the remaining leaves clinging to the oaks in the park.

Dan Dougherty, the 2024-25 governor of District 7305 and a member of the White Oak club, is holding a white 8-foot pole. The words “May Peace Prevail on Earth” are inscribed on it in eight languages — English, Irish, Italian, Polish, German, Croatian, Spanish, and Vietnamese — spoken in the community. The phrase also appears in Braille, and there is a rainbow flag sticker and another decal for Veterans for Peace. Urchick walks up and immediately pulls out her phone, scanning the QR code on the peace pole’s side that links to a website with more information.

She encourages clubs to put up these poles as visible signals of their commitment to peace, whether at members’ homes, in their club, their community, or around the world. Dougherty’s wife, Autumn, who is also a member of the White Oak club, has made it her goal to get every club in their district to erect a peace pole in the coming year.

When the last White Oak club member arrives, everyone clusters around Urchick like players huddled around their coach during a crucial timeout. “The peace pole project is a favorite of mine because it’s a visual representation,” she tells them. “It’s going to tell everybody in White Oak who comes to this park that your club is about peacebuilding. Rotary is about peacebuilding.”

To conclude the ceremony, Urchick invites the members to reach out and touch the pole. They unite, all part of the same team — the Rotary team. Urchick smiles. Game on.

This story originally appeared in the July 2024 issue of Rotary magazine.


Visit :-

https://www.rotary.org/en/playmaker-stephanie-urchick






More than US$4 million funds water, education, agriculture supplies, and equipment for affected communities

 

More than US$4 million funds water, education, agriculture supplies, and equipment for affected communities

By 

2023-24 RI President R. Gordon R. McInally and his partner, Heather, give children gifts during a visit to Hatay province, Turkey. The area suffered extensive damage in the 2023 earthquake. 24 April 2024.

©Rotary International

The relief efforts and funding Rotary provided after last year’s devastating earthquake in Turkey and Syria show that Rotary members create hope where it is needed, said RI President R. Gordon R. McInally during a visit to the country.

“Having met the Rotary members in Hatay province, Turkey, I know that they will [continue to] be there to help rebuild their community,” McInally said while visiting affected areas in April. Among many stops, he toured a kindergarten and a vocational school that Rotary members resupplied and a mobile kitchen and bakery they outfitted. “I thank Rotary members for helping Create Hope in the World for those so badly affected by the disaster,” McInally added, referencing his presidential theme.

Since the earthquake and aftershocks in February 2023, which killed more than 55,000 people, Rotary has distributed over US$4 million to support affected communities. Aid efforts were confined to Turkey since Rotary has no clubs in Syria. Members have assembled container cities for housing, built water treatment plants, provided seedlings and cows to farmers, given equipment to hospitals, donated computers for students, and opened a veterinary clinic.

Immediately after the 7.8 magnitude earthquake, Rotary established a dedicated disaster response fund that received more than US$2.7 million in contributions. (The fund is now closed to donations.) Additional aid efforts used global grants totaling about US$1.4 million.

“Once Rotary members witnessed what had happened, they came and provided help,” says Sezgin Acioğlu, a member of the Rotary Club of İskenderun, Turkey. “It was agile. It was very quick, very fast. It … encouraged everybody [else] to help.”

Aid for immediate and long-term needs

The immediate aid included a search-and-rescue van, hospital supplies, tents, sleeping bags, and air conditioners.

Rotary districts in Turkey helped the government set up three communities with housing made of shipping containers. It was challenging to find high-quality, affordable containers, says governor-nominee Lütfi Can Çığırgan of District 2430, because so many companies began manufacturing them right after the earthquake. Fortunately, a Rotary member in Adana, one of the major cities affected, was able to recommend a reputable company there, Çığırgan says.

“We were able to avoid buying the containers at a huge price — something we are always keen on as Rotarians,” he says.

Huseyin Dogon, a farmer, with heifers donated to his community by Districts 2420 and 2440 (Turkey) after the 2023 earthquake. Gaziantep, Turkey. 27 April 2024.

©Rotary International

Rotary members also built water treatment plants for two of the container cities. “Our systems collect water in tanks of 400 tons each and send it to the container cities with the help of pumps,” says Mehmet Altay, the governor of District 2420. “The water passing through our treatment facilities has the same quality as bottled water and is good enough to drink, make tea, and cook.”

Other projects have included a mobile dental clinic, temporary classrooms, and school computers.

“Rotary can still make a significant difference in the lives of earthquake victims,” Altay says. “Everyone who drinks the water in the facility we established thanks and prays for Rotary. We make a difference in the lives of children when they prepare homework on the computers given to them by Rotary. And in our mobile education vehicle, which is equipped with a computer, students can do research on any subject they want.”

Agricultural supplies and equipment and farm animals were another significant category of donations. The districts provided machines that farmers could share to harvest potatoes and make silage (chopped grass or other fodder that can be preserved and used later as livestock feed). The districts also donated seeds, seedlings, saplings, and pregnant cows that will help quickly rebuild herds.

“We want to make life go on. Otherwise, people from that area will go to other sides of the country. They won’t go back if there is no life there, no economic movement,” Çığırgan says.






Altay’s district also supplied a hospital in Hatay’s Dörtyol district with a pediatric echocardiography device and replaced damaged operating room equipment at Adıyaman Education and Research Hospital.

“Spinal cord and brain surgeries, which could not be performed, started to be performed again,” Altay says.

Building a veterinary clinic to help lost pets

To help pets that were hurt or abandoned after the earthquake, District 2420 established a veterinary clinic in Adıyaman province and supplied equipment for treatment and surgery. Staffers at the clinic spay and neuter the animals, tend to their wounds, and vaccinate them to help prevent diseases like rabies, which can spread to humans. Rotary members also donated a vehicle to bring animals to the clinic.

“During our visits to the earthquake area, we saw many dogs and cats wandering among the ruins, having lost their families who looked after them,” Altay says. “Some were injured and needed urgent medical attention. … This clinic will save [or] improve the health of thousands of animals.”

The veterinary clinic was named for Proteo, a rescue dog donated by Mexico, who died while searching for earthquake survivors in the rubble.

“It will ensure that the name Proteo and the aid of the Mexican nation will be remembered forever,” Altay says.

Support Rotary’s disaster response initiatives.


Visit :-

https://www.rotary.org/en/rotary-continues-support-turkey-it-rebuilds-earthquake

Thursday, May 22, 2025

Global partnership a dream come true for clean water advocate

 

Global partnership a dream come true for clean water advocate

By 

“I was always impressed with the passion Rotarians have,” Lis Bernhardt says.

Image credit: Sarah Waiswa

Few people could have been more thrilled than Lis Bernhardt, a former Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar, when Rotary and the UN Environment Programme announced a joint initiative this year to empower Rotary members to protect, restore, and sustain local bodies of water with technical guidance from UNEP experts.

A program officer for UNEP, Bernhardt spent five years moving the idea for Community Action for Fresh Water forward through leadership changes at both organizations. After the agreement was revealed during Rotary’s International Assembly in January, she posted on her LinkedIn page: “A professional dream has come true.” (Read about Bernhardt’s experience in her own words on Rotary’s blog.)

“Rotary has been a huge part of my working for the United Nations,” she later explained. “To be able to give back to Rotary, close that loop, and connect in a global partnership is super exciting.”

Bernhardt has held multiple positions in international development since her Rotary-supported studies at the Geneva Graduate Institute in Switzerland in 2000-02. Her work has often focused on the overlap between development and the environment. As a program officer for UN-Water in New York in 2015, she essentially “held the pen” for the UN’s sustainable development goal 6, which is to ensure the availability and management of clean water and sanitation systems. Many of her roles have had one thing in common: water.

That may have something to do with a chance encounter midway through her Rotary scholarship that altered her career trajectory.

Bernhardt arrived in Geneva sponsored by the Rotary Club of Valparaiso, Indiana, in her hometown. With her undergraduate degree in international studies from Northwestern University near Chicago, she intended to focus on conflict resolution and the rights of minorities.

As an intern with UN Volunteers during the summer between her first and second year, she was part of a program where nongovernmental organizations and other civil society groups in developing countries could apply for online volunteer assistance for projects like building a website, translating documents, or writing a funding proposal. Her job was to vet applications, including one from the Navajo Nation in the United States.

“Their request met all of our qualifications,” she recalls. “They clearly needed access to education. They had issues with drinking water and sanitation. They were a disadvantaged group and a minority. They met all the criteria, except that they were in the U.S.,” which disqualified the group.

Lis Bernhardt

  • Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar, 2000-01
  • Master’s in international affairs, Geneva Graduate Institute, Switzerland, 2002
  • MBA, Henley Business School, England, 2012
  • Though the group’s application was rejected, its plight stuck with her. She remained in contact and visited the Navajo Nation. The example became the basis for her master’s thesis that explored the disconnect between the environmental and socioeconomic tracks of development.

    “In the end, all of their issues were environmental. I saw how conditions in the environment underpin all other development issues,” she says. “That’s where I shifted my thinking. Every job I have had since has been in the environmental sphere.”

    After short stints with Amnesty International and as a consultant for UN Volunteers, Bernhardt joined the International Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change in Bonn, Germany, serving as a program officer and head of external relations. In 2009, she took a job with a UN-Water program in Bonn and later moved to UN-Water’s office in New York where she contributed to writing the sustainable development goals on water and sanitation.

    As influential as that work was, she began to get an itch for the implementation side “to help make these sustainable goals a reality.” Moving to Kenya in 2016, she joined the Freshwater Ecosystems Unit at UNEP. It was there in 2018 that she was part of the reception for a Rotary International delegation, including incoming President Barry Rassin, that was exploring a partnership. Wheels were already in motion for the environment to become one of Rotary’s areas of focus.

    “A couple of us, including Dan Cooney, our head of communications who was a Rotary Peace Fellow, were largely responsible for driving the idea of a partnership on our end forward,” Bernhardt recalls. “We had both been involved with Rotary and knew what a relationship could look like.”



  • up: Lis Bernhardt at Lake Geneva, Switzerland. down: Bernhardt and a colleague crossing the Congo River from Brazzaville to Kinshasa for a project to preserve the carbon stores in basin peatlands. Courtesy of Lis Bernhardt

After many conversations, Bernhardt’s bosses at UNEP wanted to collect data before ironing out an agreement. Bernhardt got together with Joe Otin, then Rotary’s representative to UNEP, and together they launched a pilot project, called Adopt a River for Sustainable Development, in District 9212 covering Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, and South Sudan. Bernhardt and her colleagues worked with Rotary members in 20 clubs as they “adopted” nine rivers to collect garbage, catalog pollution information, hold community engagement events, and meet with responsible parties to discuss solutions. They performed a type of research known as citizen science, driving the creation of a long-range plan for each river.

Looking back, Bernhardt credits her scholarship year with her desire to work with Rotary members. “That year, I met with Rotarians in a lot of clubs, and it was just like talking with the club back in Valparaiso. I was always impressed with the passion Rotarians have, the fact that they are all over the world and that they want to do good for their communities.”

She remains enthusiastic about the partnership’s potential.

“Water is so valuable to everything we do,” she says. “Not a day goes by that we don’t use fresh water in some way. We drink it to live. It is embedded in the food we grow. It makes our industry go. It is essential for every kind of energy we use. Water is so present and so essential in all these processes.”

This story originally appeared in the September 2024 issue of Rotary magazine. 

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