Friday, April 11, 2025

An election monitoring mission in Nigeria presents a pathway for peacebuilding

 

An election monitoring mission in Nigeria presents a pathway for peacebuilding



Pedestrians in Abuja walk past a banner from the police force carrying a message calling for peace during the elections.

Image credit: Ben Curtis/AP photo

By 

Pietro Uzochukwu Macleo had reasons to be worried. Nigeria was holding a tightly contested presidential election and he was coordinating scores of people who would be observing the process across the country. It could get rowdy, or worse, bloody. But what Macleo felt most of all when he woke up that Saturday morning in February 2023 wasn’t fear. It was excitement.

Rotary districts in Nigeria, led by Macleo, obtained accreditation for more than 100 Rotary members to serve as official election observers. Rotarians headed to their assigned polling units in the country’s 36 states and Federal Capital Territory on the mornings of the two general election days, three weeks apart: one, the presidential and national assembly elections, and the other contests for governors and state assembly seats.

Macleo, now 37, knew how important this exercise was. Nigeria has a worrisome history of election violence, and further political instability in the country — Africa’s largest democracy and one of its biggest economies — could have a ripple effect across West Africa and beyond. “I had some concerns about safety and security. But it was more excitement,” he says. “We were making history.”

A history of violence

For most of its first four decades of independence, Nigeria was under military rule and beset by widespread corruption and communal and ethnic violence. After a historic presidential election in 1999, Nigeria introduced democratic reforms. But efforts to share power between large populations of Muslims and Christians and other groups have had halting success, leading to continued tension. Instances and allegations of gross electoral malpractice have not helped. Between the end of military dictatorship and 2019, more than 1,400 people died in election violence.

The 2023 general elections seemed ripe for more unrest. The presidential election, on 25 February, was considered the tightest race since the country restored democratic rule. After Muhammadu Buhari, from the predominantly Muslim north, had served eight years as president, it was widely felt that power should return to the mostly Christian south, but one of the biggest contenders was a candidate from the northeast. Another tinderbox: The ruling party was fielding a presidential candidate and vice presidential candidate who were both Muslims, a first since 1993 for running mates from a major party at the federal level. This fed conspiracy theories suggesting there was a plan to Islamize the country, with some even making false claims that the group’s vice presidential candidate founded Boko Haram, the Muslim militant group in northern Nigeria.

Still, Nigeria had just amended its electoral laws and introduced advanced technology to accredit voters and transmit results, providing hope that these elections would be credible — and peaceful.

Early that morning, Macleo sent out a stream of reminders to the 131 election observers via WhatsApp: Wake up, it’s time. Remember your training. You only have business with election officials and the police. Don’t engage with the media. Don’t engage with voters. Don’t forget to take your own water and snacks.

At 6 a.m., Macleo left home wearing his navy Rotary election observer jacket and green lanyard carrying his election observer ID that he would need to get around restrictions on movement across the country. He picked up a fellow Rotarian — the observers traveled in pairs — and headed to a spacious public primary school in the Garki neighborhood of the capital, Abuja.

From bodybuilder to peacebuilder

Macleo joined Rotary when he was 28, a college student obsessed with bodybuilding. When he attended his first meeting of the Rotary Club of Abuja Wuse II in 2015 wearing a sleeveless, tight-fitting outfit, he felt like the odd one out among the gathering of middle-aged career folk. But he didn’t let that discourage him. “I was instead inspired,” he recalls. “I loved the way they conducted themselves.”

He was studying political science at the University of Abuja and later focused his dissertation on elections, which spurred his interest in leadership and governance. He went on to earn doctorates in peace studies and international relations, and today, Macleo is as passionate about peacebuilding as he once was about bodybuilding.


Macleo led the election observation project. “I had some concerns about safety and security. But it was more excitement,” he says. “We were making history.”

Image credit: Andrew EsieboHis research led him to an understanding that the best pathways to peace are holistic, progressive, and inclusive. Rotary could help advance such an approach, he realized, because it already has a large network of individuals who are as driven as he is. “I saw an opportunity where you could mobilize people to address real issues on peace,” he says.

When he became his Rotary club’s president — its youngest — in 2019, he put the focus on projects centered around peacebuilding. That same year, he enrolled in the Institute for Economics and Peace’s Ambassador Program, which helped him see how the eight Pillars of Positive Peace could lead to tangible results in Nigeria.

In 2020, Macleo formed a foundation, which is establishing a network of Positive Peace advocates in Rotary clubs around Nigeria to implement projects. And in 2023, he participated in Rotary’s Positive Peace Activator Program, an intensive learning opportunity for dedicated peacebuilders.

Voter education and election monitoring are not as tangible as drilling a borehole well, equipping a health facility, or building a block of classrooms. Still, Macleo believes they are just as crucial, if not more so. If you can get strong leadership, if people believe their votes are protected and will count, then a government might emerge that will serve effectively and remove the need for a borehole, a hospital bed, and a new block of classrooms in a lot of communities.

Goddy Nnadi, governor of District 9125 during the 2023 elections, agrees. In decades as a member, he has seen Rotary’s work help people in meaningful ways. With the election observation program, he believes Rotary is doing more. “Some see Rotarians as those who impact people,” Nnadi says. “This project impacts the system. The systemic improvement is what the nation needs. The reason is this: If we have a good election, you elect good people, and good people will make the state better.”

All over the world, observers, both domestic and international, help improve the quality of elections. Observers hold authorities accountable, ensure fairness and transparency, build public confidence in the process, deter fraud, and document irregularities — especially crucial in fragile democracies. Their recommendations can lead to improvements in the political process, and their presence builds trust.

Nigeria’s four district governors in 2023, including Goddy Nnadi, supported the project.

Image credit: Andrew Esiebo

“To observers, it’s about the process, not the outcome,” explains Mboho Eno, who leads the Media in National Elections project at the Abuja-based Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development. Nigeria’s civil society organizations deserve credit for progress, Eno says.

Months before the 2023 elections, Rotary districts in Nigeria organized voter education events, including workshops in every state and trainings shared through social and traditional media. They reached over 100,000 people. One of them was Zigwai Tagwai, who attended one of the workshops in September 2022 at the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution in Abuja.

Tagwai, a young civic engagement advocate, heard about the program through a network she belongs to on WhatsApp. At the session, Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission demonstrated a device being introduced at the general elections that uses biometric data such as facial recognition and fingerprints to verify and accredit voters. Tagwai learned the basics of the reformed electoral process, how best to go about voting, and the responsibilities of citizen observers. She passed this information on to scores of other young people in her network.

The workshop also led Tagwai, who had already completed the IEP curriculum for peace ambassadors, to further engage with the Rotary network. She was accepted into the Positive Peace Activator Program and has since collaborated with Rotary members on peacebuilding activities. “There are shared values,” she says.

That preelection work by Rotary districts, supported by Nnadi and the country’s three other district governors at the time — Omotunde Lawson, Mightyman Aye Dikuro, and Grace Okaro — is what enabled them to meet the criteria to serve as official observers in the 2023 general elections. When they discovered in January 2023 that they had been selected, they put out a call for Rotarians to volunteer. The response was so overwhelming they had to narrow the pool to club presidents and past and present district officers. The Rotary observers went through robust training, collected their identification cards, and eagerly awaited the big day.

An atmosphere of merriment

As Macleo and his partner made their way to their first polling place, they hit an immediate snag: aggressive security that restricted their movement, observer tags or not. By the time they got to the site at a school, they met a large crowd of voters already waiting. When officials finally opened the gate, voters swarmed chaotically inside.

As officials set up materials, Macleo observed someone suspiciously taking pictures of voting items. “I knew from the training with INEC [the election commission] that was not allowed,” he says. Since interacting with voters was prohibited too, he reported the person to security agents.

Officials count ballots in front of party agents and observers at a polling station in Lagos during Nigeria’s gubernatorial and state assembly election.

Image credit: Sunday Alamba/AP Photo 

More than 3,000 voters cast ballots at a dozen polling stations located around the school as roughly 20 security agents stood by to prevent any outbursts of violence. As in many other places, the voting was peaceful, especially during the early hours. There was an atmosphere of merriment. “People brought food and drinks because the queue was long,” Macleo says.

From the school, Macleo moved on to another area of the Garki neighborhood. The crowd there wasn’t as big, and the voting process was better managed. Afterward, he visited a voting site at a post office. By the end of the day, he had observed more than 20 polling stations.

Adama Mohammed had a similar experience. She left home at 7:30 a.m. and didn’t return until after observing the evening Muslim prayer, past 6 p.m. Driving around in her red SUV, she visited at least 23 polling stations in the upscale Maitama area of Abuja, home to foreign embassies, restaurants, and shops. She was constantly on the move, drinking from her water flask and munching on finger foods to replenish her energy. She was excited to soak in as much information as possible. “I didn’t sit down anywhere,” she says.

An Abuja-based lawyer and a member of the Rotary Club of Abuja Maitama, Mohammed says she is driven to advocate for people who need help, especially women and children. She joined Rotary because she saw an opportunity to do this on a bigger scale. She was particularly keen on the election observation project because she was “conscious of the importance of the democratic process and electing good leaders,” she says. She enjoyed connecting with other Rotary election observers across the country through WhatsApp. “I was amazed at the passion and commitment of our members,” she says.

Throughout the day, Rotary members exchanged photos: polling places in Nigeria’s modern urban metropolises and those in rural communities of dirt roads and mud and thatch houses; people waiting in plastic chairs for poll workers to set up, and others tracing a list of voters on a wall. A picture uploaded to WhatsApp by an observer in northeastern Nigeria shows a traditional leader dressed in a white boubou, a flowing garment, and flanked by aides — one stands behind him, holding a ceremonial umbrella so big he has to use both hands.


Rotary election observers often received a warm reception and were seen as a neutral and trusted voice. “I was amazed at the passion and commitment of our members,” Adama Mohammed says. Courtesy of Pietro Uzochukwu Macleo

Macleo noticed several problems as the day progressed. The distribution of voters was lopsided. One polling place could have over a thousand voters and another steps away would have only 50. After waiting in line for several hours, some voters found out they’d been reassigned to vote someplace else. There wasn’t adequate support for people with physical and visual disabilities, and there were hiccups with uploading the counted results.

While moving from one polling unit to another, Macleo frequently checked the WhatsApp group of observers to see how others were faring. “The BVAS [biometrics] machine has failed to work and the PO [presiding officer] has sent for the technician. Voters waiting,” one observer in Cross River state wrote. Another observer in the city of Yenagoa noted that national election officials had yet to arrive. “Security forces are around. Voters are getting agitated.”

There were updates, too, about the warm reception that Rotarians received. “Voters who knew about Rotary or who have been Rotarians or are currently Rotarians were happy to see Rotary actively involved in supporting a peaceful election,” a member in Abuja wrote. “Exactly,” someone replied. Another Rotarian in Akwa Ibom state observed that he even met people who expressed interest in joining the organization. And voters drew the attention of at least one of the Rotary observers, a member in Niger state, to suspicious activities. “They saw us as neutral and trusted us,” he said.

Among other problems, some voters had to wait until the following day to complete their ballots. And advanced voting technologies, key reasons for hope in the reliability of the results, did not function dependably, observers noted. These observations were shared with the electoral commission and other key stakeholders in an 83-page report, which called it “a ‘successful’ election — however imperfect.”

“You won’t find any partisan information in our report,” Macleo says. “We don’t care about who won or who lost. We were looking out for inclusivity. Was the process inclusive for people living with a disability? Was it inclusive of the aged? Was it inclusive of women? Were the rules and regulations followed? What transpired? Could it trigger conflict?”

Litigation over the presidential election delayed the gubernatorial voting by a week. In the end, Bola Tinubu, the ruling party candidate, was named president.

At the vanguard for peace

After a campaign period marred by a level of political violence comparable to previous years, the election day voting proceeded largely peacefully despite some pockets of violence. Reducing election violence opens the door to peacebuilding, Macleo says, especially among young people, who have sometimes been vulnerable to recruitment by political groups to carry out attacks on candidates, voters, and election commission offices.



Rotary members in Nigeria are working with young people such as these Rotary Youth Leadership Awards attendees to help them avoid being drawn into political violence. Courtesy of Pietro Uzochukwu Macleo

Rotary districts in Nigeria are now designing a project to create peace education clubs at schools and in communities across the country that could be integrated, Macleo envisions, into Rotaract and Interact clubs. It teaches young people about issues such as cultism, gang violence, peace, tolerance, human rights, civic responsibilities, drug use, cybercrime, and so on.

One of the hopes is that they’ll avoid being drawn into political violence. “The election period opened our eyes to the fact that some actors fan the embers of hate, of disinformation, ethnicity, bias,” Macleo says. “You don’t just start addressing these issues overnight. It has to be systemic. You address the issue to make sure there are no available hands for them to use, and that’s from building capacity for the youth.”

To support the work, Nigerian Rotarians chartered a national chapter of the Rotary Action Group for Peace, with 200 members and more than 2,000 affiliates, including Rotary members, Rotaractors, Rotary Peace Fellows, and others — and with Macleo at the helm.

While funding has been a challenge, Macleo sees great potential, not just in Nigeria, but for peace-loving Rotary members around the world. “By joining Rotary, I saw an opportunity where you could actually mobilize people to address real issues on peace. That was the catch for me,” he says. “We are at the vanguard for the eradication of polio. That’s the same kind of imagination I have for peace.”

This story originally appeared in the February 2025 issue of Rotary magazine.

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rotary.org/en/election-observers




A pioneer in Black horror fiction resurrects her uncle’s history

 

A pioneer in Black horror fiction resurrects her uncle’s history

As a Rotary Scholar at the University of Leeds, Tananarive Due discovered Nigerian literature. “It was a whole new world for me.”

Image credit: Frank Ishman

By 

In 1937, 15-year-old Robert Stephens died while imprisoned at the notorious Dozier School for Boys in Marianna, Florida, likely the victim of a stabbing. Eighty-six years later, a reincarnate Robert Stephens was again imprisoned, only this time he landed in the Gracetown School for Boys, a fictional Florida prison found within the pages of The Reformatory, an award-winning 2023 novel.

Tananarive Due, the novel’s author, is a former Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar, a lecturer in the African American studies program at UCLA, and, says the Los Angeles Times, a pioneer in the Black horror genre. She’s also the great-niece of the real-life Robert Stephens and the daughter of two renowned civil rights activists. A self-described “freedom lawyer,” her father, John Dorsey Due Jr., helped innovate the movement of civil rights cases to federal venues to overcome the bias of Southern courts. Rather than pay a $300 fine for attempting to integrate a whites-only lunch counter in Tallahassee, her mother, Patricia Stephens Due, spent 49 days in a Florida jail in 1960; that same year she suffered permanent eye damage when she was tear-gassed during a protest march.

“My parents were basically my first superheroes,” says Due. “Their courage and their commitment to not just Black rights but to human rights left a very strong impression on me. It was a pretty extraordinary household.”

‘Writing wasn’t just a dream I had’

Due began writing at a young age, motivated on one occasion by the death of a man while she was growing up in Miami. In 1979, following a high-speed chase, white police officers used clubs and heavy flashlights to beat Arthur McDuffie, a 33-year-old Black insurance salesman and former Marine. Police tried to hide what happened, saying in a report that McDuffie was injured when he lost control of his motorcycle; the medical examiner’s office, however, said he died from blows to the head. An all-white jury acquitted the men despite other officers’ testimony about the cover-up. Riots broke out across Miami, and 14-year-old Due was devastated.

“I really believed in my heart that that page [of racial injustice] had been turned,” she recalls. “I was sitting in my junior high school cafeteria and they were playing this ridiculous Muzak trying to placate us. I felt like I was losing my mind. Then I wrote this poem, and all of a sudden I felt better. I could breathe again.”

Called “I Want to Live,” the prose poem envisioned a utopian society where racial, ethnic, and religious distinctions had vanished. It concluded, “Maybe that sounds like heaven, but if I lived there right now, I’d call this society hell.”

Her equanimity restored, Due went home and told her mother about the poem. “She said, ‘You’re so lucky that you can express those feelings in writing.’ That was the first time I realized that writing wasn’t just a dream I had.”

Tananarive Due

  • Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar, 1987-88
  • Master’s in English literature, University of Leeds, England, 1988
  • Book awards for The Reformatory: Bram Stoker, Shirley Jackson, Chautauqua, the Los Angeles Times
  • In 1987, Due graduated with a bachelor’s degree from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism in Evanston, Illinois. Rotary International has its headquarters in that Chicago suburb, but it wasn’t until she returned home to Florida that Due learned about Rotary. “I thought I was going to try to get a master’s in creative writing,” she remembers. “But a friend from church asked, ‘Have you heard about The Rotary Foundation scholarship?’ It almost seemed too good to be true.”

    Due received the scholarship and attended the University of Leeds in England. She earned a master’s in English literature, albeit with an unexpected focus. “I fell down a rabbit hole with Nigerian literature,” she says, describing her first encounters with the works of the Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, the Booker Prize winner Ben Okri, and Chinua Achebe, author of Things Fall Apart. “It was a whole new world for me.”

    In 1995, while working as a feature writer and columnist for the Miami Herald, Due published her first book, The Between, which The New York Times called “part horror novel, part detective story and part speculative fiction.” Due leaned into her inclination toward horror in the books that followed, including The Living Blood (2001), which won the American Book Award, and the 2022 graphic novel The Keeper, which she wrote with her husband, Steven Barnes. That trend continues in The Reformatory, a compulsively readable novel that frighteningly melds supernatural horrors (especially “haints,” or ghosts) with the horrors of Black life in the Jim Crow South — a place, Due says, where “it’s actually the human monsters that are scarier than the ghosts.”

Resurrecting family history





As with her earlier books, The Reformatory helped alleviate those fears, especially with the opportunity it provided not only to imagine an alternative fate for her great-uncle, but to rescue him from oblivion. Until she received an unexpected call from the office of Florida’s attorney general — explaining that her distant relative might be buried at the Dozier School — Due was unaware that she had a great-uncle named Robert Stephens. Any evidence of his existence had been erased from her family’s history.

As for her preference for the horror genre, Due credits her mother, “a die-hard horror movie fan,” as well as the eye-opening and heart-pounding experience of reading Stephen King’s The Shining when she was 16. In Freedom in the Family: A Mother-Daughter Memoir of the Fight for Civil Rights, the book she co-wrote with her mother, Due alludes to her deepest childhood fears: loss and death.

After multiple visits to Marianna with her father, Due resurrected that history. To honor her parents, she also hid a few Easter eggs in her novel. The fictional Robert’s fearless and psychic sister is named Gloria; that was the middle name of Due’s mother, who died in 2012. And the dexterous NAACP lawyer who fights for young Robert’s freedom is named John Dorsey, an homage to Due’s father.

“I believe I may have discovered the remedy for my childhood fears of death and loss at last,” Due writes in her final passage in Freedom in the Family. “Remembering is the one and only thing that can make time stand still.”

This story originally appeared in the February 2025 issue of Rotary magazine.


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An immigrant finds belonging in Rotary

 

An immigrant finds belonging in Rotary

Far from home and seriously injured, a young man finds comfort and renewed purpose among his Rotary family

By 

“¿Dónde estoy?” I thought, returning to the world, all white light, blurs of color, and muffled sound. “Where am I?” My lips were so dry. “¡Agua! ¡Agua!,” I cried, asking for water. I struggled to get up, but my mother told me to lie still. I was in the hospital. Those blurs of color turned out to be balloons. There had been an accident, my Jeep versus a tree. The tree won. I’d been in a coma for two weeks.

I tried to think back. I remember driving my car after a long shift at the restaurant where I worked. Then nothing: no crash, no tree, no ambulance. No three major surgeries to drill a hole in my skull to reduce pressure on my brain and to repair my broken left hip and right clavicle. The doctors said that I was lucky to be in a coma for only two weeks. It could have been months. I might never have woken up.

My life started coming back in patches. My name is Andrés Briceño. I was born in Venezuela, though today I live in Texas. I came to this country in November 2021 when I was 23 years old. I moved to The Woodlands, north of Houston, because an aunt and some of my cousins live here. But I also belonged to a larger, international family — Rotary — which I first joined when I was living in Venezuela as a member of both the Rotary Club of Las Delicias and the Rotaract Club of Las Delicias Leone Rossi.

When something is wrong, I want to change it. My dream was to see my country free. But freeing a country is not easy. When you defend freedom in a dictatorship, you become a target. Ultimately I had to leave.

A new club

After I arrived in Texas, I reached out to the Rotary Club of The Woodlands. It changed my experience as an immigrant. One month after my arrival in the United States, I attended the club’s Christmas party. I was far from Venezuela, yet the club’s members made me feel like I was home, that I belonged in their community. That was so valuable: being accepted, feeling like I belonged.

My accident was on 25 June 2023. The day before was a Saturday. It had been only three days since the Rotaract Club of The Woodlands, which I was instrumental in establishing, was officially chartered. I woke up very early. It was a hot summer day. Our club was helping the Woodlands Rotary club with an event for youth. It was like a scavenger hunt, with clues hidden here and there. The kids had fun, running around looking for them. That took most of the morning, and I went straight from there to work. Saturday is the busiest day of the week at the restaurant, and it was several hours after midnight when I was driving home. Five minutes from my aunt’s house, the accident occurred.

I spent 33 days in the hospital. For the first week, they didn’t know if I was going to survive. My mother never gave up hope — and the members of Rotary were there all the time for my mom, keeping her company and supporting her. Kay Boehm-Fannin, the 2023-24 president of the Rotary Club of The Woodlands, visited me in the hospital every day. Every single day, even though I wasn’t awake and didn’t know she was there. Other Rotary members would line up in the lobby, waiting for their turn to see me.

When I woke up, one of the nurses asked me, “Are you famous?” I said no, not yet. Why? She said, “You have so many visitors, all the people coming every day. That’s not normal.” I felt so loved.

As did my mother. My dear friend Dr. Lucian Rivela, a member of the Woodlands Rotary club, frequently checked in with my doctors and shared any updates about my status with my anxious mother, who doesn’t speak English. The day I awoke from my coma was my mother’s birthday, and my Rotary family held a party for her in the ICU waiting room.

Four days after being discharged from the hospital, I attended a Rotary After Hours event and, two days after that, a meeting of the Woodlands Rotary club. I couldn’t wait any longer to be back among my Rotary family. I felt an urgent need to thank them. Which I did, tearfully.

The road to recovery

Right away I had to face the changes in the little things we take for granted. Things like using the bathroom or climbing the stairs — sitting on the steps and using my arms rather than my legs — to get to my room in my aunt’s two-story house.

I rushed too quickly into trying to get my life back. I didn’t realize the magnitude of what had happened to me. I learned that sometimes you can’t rush things. You have to take it one step at a time.

And every step I took, Rotary was there for me — even before I could actually take steps. I was in a wheelchair for months. My Rotary family provided the wheelchair, and the walker and the cane that followed. They even hosted a fundraiser to help me cover my physical therapy costs as I learned to walk again.

During my recovery, I had two wonderful therapists, Stephanie and David, who worked with me at a Houston-area clinic. Stephanie was an Interactor in high school and later spent a year studying in England as a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar. What she experienced over that year inspired her to come back to the United States and earn a doctorate in physical therapy.

Stephanie and I became friends thanks to that Rotary connection, and I invited her to accompany me to the elegant gala thrown in February 2024 by the Rotary Club of The Woodlands. The day of the gala, I decided I no longer needed my cane and left it at home. For the first time in months, I was walking freely. And that night at the gala, surrounded by my Rotary family, Stephanie and I danced.

Feeling as if I’d received a second chance at life, I returned to college this year. I’m studying political science and eventually hope to get a master’s in economics. I’m preparing myself to return to Venezuela and help rebuild my home country. Until then, I’m looking for work with a nonprofit here in the United States. My dream job would be helping others — just as I’ve tried to do ever since I have belonged to Rotary.

Andrés Briceño is a founding member and president of the Rotaract Club of The Woodlands in Texas.

This story originally appeared in the April 2025 issue of Rotary magazine.

Rotary leaders from both countries reflect on the challenges and opportunities of peacebuilding across borders

 

Rotary leaders from both countries reflect on the challenges and opportunities of peacebuilding across borders

By 

Photo credit: Jong-Min Park, Rotary Korea magazine

Korea and Japan share a complicated history and sometimes have different views on historical issues. Yet Rotarians from these neighboring countries are determined to transcend such differences by building strong friendships.

For more than 40 years, Rotarians from Korea and Japan have come together through the Korea-Japan Rotary Friendship Conference, a tradition aimed at building peace, understanding, and friendship between the neighboring countries. This year, after a four-year pause due to the pandemic, the 16th Korea-Japan Friendship Conference was held on October 24-25 in Seoul. The conference, attended by 220 Japanese Rotarians and numerous Korean Rotarians, included a keynote speech by former United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on the theme of “International Peace and Rotary.”

“In an era of global instability, the five ‘Ps’ — person, planet, peace, prosperity, and partnership — are essential virtues for Rotary,” Ki-moon said. “I hope all members will strive for the peace and prosperity of humanity.”

To mark this milestone event, we spoke with Past District Governors Kiho Hong of Korea and Hironori Sugawara of Japan, both of whom serve as vice-chairs of the Friendship Committees in their respective countries. In a conversation the day before the conference, they shared their experiences, the importance of collaboration, and their vision for future cooperation.

Past District Governor Hironori Sugawara (left) and Past District Governor Kiho Hong converse at the Rotary Center in Seoul, Korea.

Q: How did you get involved with the Japan-Korea Friendship Committee?

Sugawara: My family and I love Korea, so I’ve been visiting the country at least once a year. My club has a sister club in Korea, and that was how I first became involved. My district (D2520) and Mr. Hong’s district (D3640) are sister districts, so I also got involved at the district level. In 2019, the Japan-Korea Friendship Conference was held in my hometown, Sendai, and many Rotarians, including myself, participated. Now I am involved in this conference at a national level.

Hong: I’ve also been deeply involved in the exchange between Korea and Japan. The relationship is so close that, in my mind, I can’t distinguish between Japanese and Korean Rotarians.

Not only I, but many members in my district have relationships with Japan, especially through sister clubs. Members come and go like families and build friendships. What we gain from these experiences is not something we can buy with money.

Sugawara: About 220 Japanese Rotarians are coming to Seoul to attend this year’s conference. I would like to see more members attend. I know they need to pay and make time to travel, but this isn’t just any trip. Like Rotary’s international conventions, this is a wonderful opportunity to experience the significance of Rotary. I hope that all new members can experience this and feel the excitement like I do.

Q: What have you each learned from working with Rotarians from the other country? How has the collaboration contributed to building peace and understanding?

Sugawara: What I learned through my involvement in the exchanges is that Rotarians in both countries are the same, because we share the spirit of Rotary.

In Rotary, we don’t have representatives of a country, such as a representative of Korea or Japan. In Rotary, about 530 district governors deliver the president’s messages to their clubs. Those messages change slightly from year to year, but the underlying philosophy is the same. It has been the same since its founding.

Yesterday, I happened to have dinner with a group of four Korean friends. I first met them in Sendai when they visited us. They could only speak a few words in Japanese, but we were all happy for two to three hours at the dinner table. In Rotary, we all respect and understand each other, despite our differences, because we all feel and think in the same way.

Hong: Rotary’s philosophy and mission truly encompass everyone. As Sugawara mentioned, that’s why four friends could communicate in basic Japanese and still understand each other: because the way of thinking, the way of life, is the same. That’s peace. Take, for instance, past Rotary International President Sakuji Tanaka’s theme of “Peace through Service.” Peace is not just the absence of war. This peace starts with one person and gradually spreads, and for that, I’m grateful to Rotary.

Sugawara: When the Great East Japan Earthquake struck in 2011, we received a lot of support from all over the world, especially from Korean members. Likewise, if I hear about disasters in Korea, I worry about them and send emails or contact them immediately. There might have been political issues between our countries, but our continued friendship across the border will promote peace.

Q: Besides the conferences, how have Rotarians from Korea and Japan been working together?

Sugawara: On October 25, the second day of the conference, Rotarians from Korea and Japan will gather, wearing polio-themed T-shirts, to clean up the local area. This will also be reported at the Rotary Institute in Japan, sending a powerful message. This is a step forward from just holding a conference or enjoying the friendship.

Hong: Japan used to provide support to South Korea. Korea provided support to Japan after the Kobe Earthquake and the East Japan Earthquake. This kind of mutual support is not only financial, but also emotional. Today, Japan and Korea rank among the top countries in membership and contribution within Rotary International. Korea engages in service on a global scale, often contributing more than it has received. It would be even better if we could work together on joint projects, where both Japan and Korea could support other countries as partners.

Q: Looking ahead, what are your hopes for the future of Rotary collaboration between Korea and Japan?

Sugawara: I would like this event to be not only a time to say, “Hi, it’s been a long time”, but also an opportunity to discuss practical matters. We can have breakout sessions on topics like increasing membership. Through such discussions, we will be able to share challenges and ideas and further develop Rotary in both countries.

In terms of membership, the number of members has been increasing in Korea; in neighboring Japan, the number is decreasing. Korean members embrace changes such as new club models and focus on young people and DEI. Japanese members can learn from Korean members. There could be a sense of competition, but in a good way: to improve each other. My motto is “Persistence is power.” My job is to get more people involved in our friendship conferences. We do not live forever, so it is important to make sure that our efforts will be passed on to the next generation, like my predecessor did to me.

We have already decided on the dates and the location of the next conference. It will be held in Kobe, Japan in October 2026. It will be announced tomorrow.

Hong: Today’s world is completely different from the world in the past. We see more globalization and the world is becoming borderless. Global companies such as Google, Microsoft, and Samsung are emerging. The meaning of a country is much less, like you see in Europe. In the next 20 or 30 years, the values and ways of thinking of people around the world may become similar to Rotary’s.

If we continue our efforts between Japan and Korea, and if we do it well, I think we can become a role model in the world. The Japan-Korea Friendship Conference has strengthened our hopes, our mutual growth, and our friendship over time.

Learn more about how Rotary promotes peace around the world.

Visit :-

https://www.rotary.org/en/korea-japan-friendship-conference-sparks-dialogue



Thursday, April 10, 2025

Our bush walk will be roughly 3.5km along sealed and unsealed paths.


Our bush walk will be roughly 3.5km along sealed and unsealed paths. We'll be meeting in the city and catching the train together. Check out Facebook Event so that you don't miss an update: tinyurl.com/LyntonWalk


 

HarmonyWeek is a time when Australians celebrate their multiculturalism


#HarmonyWeek is a time when Australians celebrate their multiculturalism. At our club, we are proud to have an extremely diverse membership, including a large number of international students. It's through our many contexts we are able to thrive and help make Australia and the world a better place.

We hope you'll join us in wearing orange this week to show your support for cultural diversity and an inclusive Australia. Orange signifies social communication and meaningful conversations. It also relates to the freedom of ideas and encouragement of mutual respect.


 

Wishing you peace, love, and joy in Ramadan and on Eid < Rotaract Adelaide University


Today marks the begining of the month of Ramadan. To everyone who is participating, we would like to wish a happy Ramadan and Eid al-Fitr ahead!


Source Link: https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=524647889857322&set=a.489999436655501
 

Will you be turning off your lights and engaging in nature this


Will you be turning off your lights and engaging in nature this #EarthHour ? Tomorrow we will be going for a walk in Lynton Reserve, check out our Facebook Event for more information. #TimeOutForNature

 Source Link: https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=525706313084813&set=a.489999453322166