Tuesday, April 15, 2025

๐™๐™ค๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™ฉ ๐˜พ๐™ก๐™ช๐™— ๐™ค๐™› ๐˜ผ๐™œ๐™ง๐™ž-๐™‘๐™–๐™ง๐™จ๐™ž๐™ฉ๐™ฎ ๐–บ๐—‹๐—‹๐–บ๐—‡๐—€๐–พ๐–ฝ "๐–ง๐–พ๐—…๐—‰ ๐–ฃ๐–พ๐—Œ๐—„" ๐–ฟ๐—ˆ๐—‹ ๐—๐—๐–พ ๐–บ๐—‰๐—‰๐—…๐—‚๐–ผ๐–บ๐—‡๐—๐—Œ ๐—ˆ๐–ฟ ๐–ข๐—…๐—Ž๐—Œ๐—๐–พ๐—‹ ๐–ฒ๐—’๐—Œ๐—๐–พ๐—†


๐™๐™ค๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ง๐™–๐™˜๐™ฉ ๐˜พ๐™ก๐™ช๐™— ๐™ค๐™› ๐˜ผ๐™œ๐™ง๐™ž-๐™‘๐™–๐™ง๐™จ๐™ž๐™ฉ๐™ฎ ๐–บ๐—‹๐—‹๐–บ๐—‡๐—€๐–พ๐–ฝ "๐–ง๐–พ๐—…๐—‰ ๐–ฃ๐–พ๐—Œ๐—„" ๐–ฟ๐—ˆ๐—‹ ๐—๐—๐–พ ๐–บ๐—‰๐—‰๐—…๐—‚๐–ผ๐–บ๐—‡๐—๐—Œ ๐—ˆ๐–ฟ ๐–ข๐—…๐—Ž๐—Œ๐—๐–พ๐—‹ ๐–ฒ๐—’๐—Œ๐—๐–พ๐—† ๐– ๐–ฝ๐—†๐—‚๐—Œ๐—Œ๐—‚๐—ˆ๐—‡ 2021-22 ๐—‚๐—‡ ๐–ก๐–บ๐—‡๐—€๐—…๐–บ๐–ฝ๐–พ๐—Œ๐— ๐– ๐—€๐—‹๐—‚๐–ผ๐—Ž๐—…๐—๐—Ž๐—‹๐–บ๐—… ๐–ด๐—‡๐—‚๐—๐–พ๐—‹๐—Œ๐—‚๐—๐—’. ๐–ฎ๐—Ž๐—‹ ๐—๐—ˆ๐—‡๐—ˆ๐—‹๐–บ๐–ป๐—…๐–พ ๐—๐–พ๐–บ๐–ผ๐—๐–พ๐—‹๐—Œ ๐—๐—‚๐—Œ๐—‚๐—๐–พ๐–ฝ ๐—ˆ๐—Ž๐—‹ ๐—Œ๐—๐–บ๐—…๐—…. ๐–ณ๐—ˆ๐–ฝ๐–บ๐—’ ๐–บ๐—‡๐–ฝ ๐—๐—๐–พ ๐—‰๐—‹๐–พ๐—๐—‚๐—ˆ๐—Ž๐—Œ ๐–ฝ๐–บ๐—’ ๐—๐—๐–พ ๐—†๐–พ๐—†๐–ป๐–พ๐—‹๐—Œ ๐—ˆ๐–ฟ ๐—ˆ๐—Ž๐—‹ ๐–ผ๐—…๐—Ž๐–ป ๐—๐–พ๐—…๐—‰ ๐—†๐–บ๐—‡๐—’ ๐—Œ๐—๐—Ž๐–ฝ๐–พ๐—‡๐—๐—Œ ๐—๐—‚๐—๐— ๐–บ๐–ผ๐–ผ๐—ˆ๐—†๐—†๐—ˆ๐–ฝ๐–บ๐—๐—‚๐—ˆ๐—‡, ๐–ผ๐–พ๐—‡๐—๐—‹๐–พ ๐—…๐—ˆ๐–ผ๐–บ๐—๐—‚๐—ˆ๐—‡ ๐–บ๐—‡๐–ฝ ๐—ˆ๐—๐—๐–พ๐—‹ ๐—‡๐–พ๐–ผ๐–พ๐—Œ๐—Œ๐–บ๐—‹๐—’ ๐—‚๐—‡๐–ฟ๐—ˆ๐—‹๐—†๐–บ๐—๐—‚๐—ˆ๐—‡.
๐–ง๐–พ๐—‹๐–พ ๐–บ๐—‹๐–พ ๐—Œ๐—ˆ๐—†๐–พ ๐—Œ๐—‡๐–บ๐—‰๐—Œ ๐–ฟ๐—‹๐—ˆ๐—† "๐—›๐—ฒ๐—น๐—ฝ ๐—ฑ๐—ฒ๐˜€๐—ธ ๐—ณ๐—ผ๐—ฟ ๐—ฎ๐—ฑ๐—บ๐—ถ๐˜€๐˜€๐—ถ๐—ผ๐—ป ๐˜๐—ฒ๐˜€๐˜ ๐—ฝ๐—ฟ๐—ผ๐—ด๐—ฟ๐—ฎ๐—บ".


All reactio
25


 

๐˜™๐˜ฐ๐˜ต๐˜ข๐˜ณ๐˜ข๐˜ค๐˜ต ๐˜Š๐˜ญ๐˜ถ๐˜ฃ ๐˜ฐ๐˜ง ๐˜ˆ๐˜จ๐˜ณ๐˜ช-๐˜๐˜ข๐˜ณ๐˜ด๐˜ช๐˜ต๐˜บ ๐—Œ๐—Ž๐–ผ๐–ผ๐–พ๐—Œ๐—Œ๐–ฟ๐—Ž๐—…๐—…๐—’ ๐–ผ๐—ˆ๐—†๐—‰๐—…๐–พ๐—๐–พ๐–ฝ ๐—๐—๐–พ๐—‚๐—‹ ๐–ฟ๐—‚๐—‹๐—Œ๐— ๐—‰๐—‹๐—ˆ๐—€๐—‹๐–บ๐—† ๐—‡๐–บ๐—†๐–พ๐–ฝ ๐–ฐ๐—Ž๐—‚๐—“ ๐–ข๐—ˆ๐—†๐—‰๐–พ๐—๐—‚๐—๐—‚๐—ˆ๐—‡


๐˜™๐˜ฐ๐˜ต๐˜ข๐˜ณ๐˜ข๐˜ค๐˜ต ๐˜Š๐˜ญ๐˜ถ๐˜ฃ ๐˜ฐ๐˜ง ๐˜ˆ๐˜จ๐˜ณ๐˜ช-๐˜๐˜ข๐˜ณ๐˜ด๐˜ช๐˜ต๐˜บ ๐—Œ๐—Ž๐–ผ๐–ผ๐–พ๐—Œ๐—Œ๐–ฟ๐—Ž๐—…๐—…๐—’ ๐–ผ๐—ˆ๐—†๐—‰๐—…๐–พ๐—๐–พ๐–ฝ ๐—๐—๐–พ๐—‚๐—‹ ๐–ฟ๐—‚๐—‹๐—Œ๐— ๐—‰๐—‹๐—ˆ๐—€๐—‹๐–บ๐—† ๐—‡๐–บ๐—†๐–พ๐–ฝ ๐–ฐ๐—Ž๐—‚๐—“ ๐–ข๐—ˆ๐—†๐—‰๐–พ๐—๐—‚๐—๐—‚๐—ˆ๐—‡ 6๐—๐— "๐—”๐—ป๐˜„๐—ฒ๐˜€๐—ต๐—ผ๐—ป" 2022 ๐—Ž๐—‡๐–ฝ๐–พ๐—‹ ๐–ฏ๐—‹๐—ˆ๐–ฟ๐–พ๐—Œ๐—Œ๐—‚๐—ˆ๐—‡๐–บ๐—… ๐–ฃ๐–พ๐—๐–พ๐—…๐—ˆ๐—‰๐—†๐–พ๐—‡๐— ๐–ฒ๐–พ๐—‹๐—๐—‚๐–ผ๐–พ ๐—ˆ๐–ฟ ๐–ฑ๐—ˆ๐—๐–บ๐—‹๐—’ ๐–ธ๐–พ๐–บ๐—‹ 2022-23. ๐– ๐–ป๐—ˆ๐—Ž๐— 110 ๐–ฒ๐—๐—Ž๐–ฝ๐–พ๐—‡๐—๐—Œ ๐–ฟ๐—‹๐—ˆ๐—† ๐—…๐–พ๐—๐–พ๐—… 1 & ๐—…๐–พ๐—๐–พ๐—… 2 ๐–พ๐—‡๐—๐—๐—Ž๐—Œ๐—‚๐–บ๐—Œ๐—๐—‚๐–ผ๐–บ๐—…๐—…๐—’ ๐—‰๐–บ๐—‹๐—๐—‚๐–ผ๐—‚๐—‰๐–บ๐—๐–พ๐–ฝ ๐—‚๐—‡ ๐—๐—๐–พ ๐—‰๐—‹๐—ˆ๐—€๐—‹๐–บ๐—†. ๐– ๐—†๐—ˆ๐—‡๐—€ ๐—๐—๐–พ ๐–ผ๐—ˆ๐—†๐—‰๐–พ๐—๐—‚๐—๐—ˆ๐—‹๐—Œ, ๐—๐—ˆ๐—‰ 10 ๐—๐–พ๐—‹๐–พ ๐–บ๐—๐–บ๐—‹๐–ฝ๐–พ๐–ฝ ๐–ฟ๐—ˆ๐—‹ ๐—๐—๐–พ๐—‚๐—‹ ๐–ป๐—‹๐—‚๐—…๐—…๐—‚๐–บ๐—‡๐— ๐—Œ๐—Ž๐–ผ๐–ผ๐–พ๐—Œ๐—Œ.
๐–ณ๐—๐—‚๐—Œ ๐—‰๐—‹๐—ˆ๐—€๐—‹๐–บ๐—† ๐—๐–บ๐—Œ ๐–ผ๐—ˆ๐—‡๐–ผ๐—…๐—Ž๐–ฝ๐–พ๐–ฝ ๐—๐—‚๐—๐— ๐–บ ๐—‡๐—‚๐–ผ๐–พ ๐–ฟ๐–พ๐—…๐—…๐—ˆ๐—๐—Œ๐—๐—‚๐—‰ ๐–บ๐—†๐—ˆ๐—‡๐—€ ๐—๐—๐–พ ๐—‹๐—ˆ๐—๐–บ๐—‹๐–บ๐–ผ๐—๐—ˆ๐—‹๐—Œ ๐–บ๐—‡๐–ฝ ๐—๐—‚๐—๐— ๐—๐—๐–พ ๐—‰๐–บ๐—‹๐—๐—‚๐–ผ๐—‚๐—‰๐–บ๐—‡๐—๐—Œ. ๐–ง๐–พ๐—‹๐–พ ๐–บ๐—‹๐–พ ๐—Œ๐—ˆ๐—†๐–พ ๐—๐—‚๐—€๐—๐—…๐—‚๐—€๐—๐—๐–พ๐–ฝ ๐—†๐—ˆ๐—†๐–พ๐—‡๐—๐—Œ ๐—ˆ๐–ฟ ๐—๐—๐–พ ๐—‰๐—‹๐—ˆ๐—€๐—‹๐–บ๐—†.

 

The goal is accessibility and advocacy

 

The goal is accessibility and advocacy

By 

Three players kick a soccer ball around the pitch listening for the rattle it makes while it rolls. As they run, they repeat the word “voy” (Spanish for “I’m going”) to avoid collision. The players have varying levels of visual impairments, so they wear blackout masks over their eyes to put them on even footing. Behind the goal, a sighted person calls out directions. Suddenly, a player breaks free and kicks the ball toward a corner of the net, where it sails past a sighted goalie.

“The thing I like most about blind football is when I score because our goalies are all sighted,” explains Gad Reuben Tumusiime, a member of Strong Spirits, a team in the Blind Football Uganda league. “Blind football is actually a stepping stone to our freedom as disabled people in the country because everyone is surprised when they see us play.”

Jagwe Muzafaru, a member of the Rotary Club of World Disability Advocacy, created the football organization in 2021 to give players a sense of independence, raise their profile, and provide them new opportunities. The most recent example of this was a player who was offered an internship at a TV station through his role setting up media for a match.


The Blind Football Uganda league was founded by a member of the Rotary Club of World Disability Advocacy.

Courtesy of Blind Football Uganda

Muzafaru, who has a visual impairment, fell in love with the sport during the 2016 Paralympics. After college, he volunteered with the Uganda Paralympic Committee before securing equipment from the Tokyo-based International Blind Football Foundation to start his own league, which he administers and coaches. He learned about the Rotary club after a founding member, Ken Masson, discovered his story online and invited him to join. “Being in this club has helped me link to different people in different places of the world,” Muzafaru says. “It has been very motivating and makes me feel like I can do more, even outside of Uganda.”

Masson was a member of a small Rotary club in Massachusetts for about 30 years when his district formed a task force to address diversity, equity, and inclusion. Before he retired, Masson had worked for a social services agency where he found jobs for people with intellectual disabilities, and he wanted to make sure the district’s task force included discussion of helping those with disabilities.

Make your club communications accessible

Rotary clubs often communicate digitally through their websites, newsletters, or social media accounts. One way you can help make that information accessible to everyone is by following standards from the nonprofit World Wide Web Consortium, built on four key principles:

  1. Perceivable: Users can distinguish content using their senses, which might mean visually or primarily through sound or touch.

    - Provide a text alternative to convey information in charts, images, recordings, and other content that isn’t text, allowing conversion to other forms such as braille or speech.

    - Use colors that contrast enough to distinguish the foreground and background.

  2. Operable: Users can control interactive elements, including through assistive technology like voice recognition or screen readers.

    - Make sure people can use a keyboard for controls, forms, or other interactive elements, as some people don’t use a standard mouse.

    - Provide enough time for people who need longer to read instructions, type text, or complete other tasks.

  3. Understandable: Users can comprehend content.

    - Use simple language free of undefined abbreviations and jargon, which helps text-to-speech technology.

    - Ensure website navigation and features are consistent and operate predictably.

  4. Robust: Users can choose the technology they prefer to interact online.

    - Make sure your content is compatible with current and future technologies, including assistive technologies.

  5. A global effort

    His reward was being named to lead a district subcommittee on the subject, which called itself the Disabilities Advisers Group and quickly blossomed to more than 80 members. Rotary International staff organized a webinar that drew on the group’s work, and the widespread interest motivated the subcommittee to branch out into something more.

    The district eagerly chartered the new cause-based Rotary club in 2021. “We’ve grown rapidly,” says Masson. “People want to join the club because of the cause. That’s number one to them. Once they join, they realize the importance of Rotary.”

    The club’s main goal is advocacy. One of its two meetings each month is devoted to speakers who share some of their work or experience in this area. The club posts videos of the talks to its Facebook page. Recent presenters have included Grace Ndegwa, of Kenya, who shared her personal journey with spina bifida and Daniel Lubiner, founder and executive director of the TouchPad Pro Foundation, who explained a new device that is making it easier to teach braille.

    Occasionally, the club organizes a larger event, such as an online summit in October that brought together educators, parents, and students from around the world to talk about the successes and challenges of inclusive education.

    Because members are spread around the globe, the club began dividing into smaller clusters that meet by time zone and language. Members support each other on a wide range of conditions, including some that are less recognized as disabilities.

  6. Players in the Blind Football Uganda league have found new opportunities through the sport.

    Courtesy of Blind Football Uganda

  7. One of those is postpolio syndrome. Club member Mona Arsenault leads Polio Quebec, an association for polio survivors. In 1984, Arsenault, who contracted polio as a child, discovered her muscles suddenly weakening again. After many medical appointments, her doctor diagnosed her with postpolio syndrome.

    A member of various support groups in the U.S. and Canada, she joined the Rotary club after meeting Masson through a postpolio syndrome advocacy group that he started. “It has opened up the world to me,” says Arsenault, who does a monthly live talk for the club online. “Ken is teaching me how to be an advocate and not just a support group leader.”

    Another member, Danilo Souza, the director of digital accessibility and inclusive communication for Sรฃo Paulo’s municipal office for people with disabilities, learned about the Disabilities Advisers Group on WhatsApp. He advises the club and other Rotary clubs in Brazil on increasing their impact through technological accessibility.

    Souza consults with academic institutions on how to understand disabled students’ needs. He says digital accessibility has become more important after the pandemic because people conduct more of life’s business virtually, from remote work to online degree programs. The goal should no longer be to get special equipment for a few employees or students, but to ensure equal opportunities for everyone.

    “I didn’t know much about Rotary, but I was interested in discussing how it could become more accessible,” says Souza. “After some months, Ken invited me to be part of the club and I understood much more about Rotary. It made sense with my own values.”

    Meanwhile, Masson acts a bit like the group’s ringleader, encouraging individual efforts while advocating for people with disabilities that are both familiar and lesser-known, seeking new areas to get the club involved in. “We cover all the bases,” says Masson. “It’s a huge world, and I want to save it every day.”

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

  8. Visit :-

  9. https://www.rotary.org/en/goal-accessibility-and-advocacy

The burning issue of e-waste

 

The burning issue of
e-waste

Electronic waste threatens the environment and public health. Refurbishment programs can help.

By 

The smoke is black and poisonous. Palestinians in the West Bank, desperate to eke out a meager living, collect discarded electronic equipment — computers, TVs, printers, cables — and burn it to extract trace amounts of valuable metals. The resulting smoke is full of toxic chemicals that infiltrate the soil, the water, and people’s bodies.

“People do it just to have a couple hundred shekels worth of copper, lead, whatever they can claim,” says Akram Amro, founder of the nonprofit Green Land Society for Health Development in the West Bank city of Hebron. “It’s an opportunity and a problem at the same time.”

Noxious plumes of smoke, like those in the West Bank, can be found in poor communities across the globe. As the world becomes more dependent on laptops, tablets, and smartphones — and as people continually upgrade to new devices — the need to find ways to repurpose or safely recycle old electronics, or e-waste, has become urgent.

Amro and his organization have studied the environmental and health impacts in villages near burn sites. They’ve found high concentrations of lead and chromium in the springs that people had relied on for water. “Now people can’t use the water from those wells, because it’s black and contaminated,” says Amro, an associate professor of physiotherapy at Al-Quds University. “And we found evidence of contamination in the blood of people working and living in those areas.”

Before the vast Agbogbloshie scrapyard in Accra, Ghana, was demolished, teenagers burn cables from computers and other electronic devices to recover valuable copper.

Image credit: Olivier Asselin/Alamy Stock Photo

Before the vast Agbogbloshie scrapyard in Accra, Ghana, was demolished, teenagers burn cables from computers and other electronic devices to recover valuable copper.

If that weren’t bad enough, Amro also found it particularly grim that toxic smoke from old electronics from Israel was affecting Palestinian villages where many schools don’t have computers for students. He recruited a Rotary club in Jerusalem and one in the United States to help create a program to refurbish old computers for schools and hopefully divert at least some from ending up in burn sites.

The $13,000 pilot project, funded by a district grant and donations from multiple clubs, hired local workers to wipe disk drives and upgrade necessary components. In this way, the initiative addressed another problem in the community: It provided a few good jobs, says Merrill Glustrom, a member of the Rotary Club of Boulder, Colorado. “They’re refurbishing computers, which could lead to programming computers or doing refurbishing elsewhere,” says Glustrom, whose club has partnered with similar electronics recycling ventures in Colorado. “There’s lots of possibilities for them besides dead-end jobs.”

Toxic metals and greenhouse gases

A record 137 billion pounds of e-waste was generated around the globe in 2022, but only about a quarter was formally collected and recycled in an environmentally sound way, according to a report from the United Nations Institute for Training and Research and other organizations. Most of the remainder was burned, dumped, or recycled unsafely, leeching dangerous substances into the environment and generating high levels of greenhouse gases. Researchers estimate that waste from devices such as computers, mobile phones, and flat-screen TVs was responsible for 580 metric tons of carbon dioxide emitted in 2020 alone.

“You have a range of heavy metals in there — lead, cadmium, and others that are toxic — and you frequently find those in groundwater close to waste sites,” says Sara Broschรฉ, a science adviser at the International Pollutants Elimination Network. “You also have toxic chemicals in the plastics in e-waste. Flame retardants, for example, are very common.”

But there is an alternative. As in Hebron, Rotary clubs around the world are repairing and updating used electronic devices and donating them to people who need them. In Australia, members of the Rotary Club of Chadstone/East Malvern collect devices, refurbish them, and donate them to nonprofit organizations in the area. In Taiwan, members of the Rotary clubs of Ping-Tung Feng-Huang and Kaohsiung secured a Rotary Foundation global grant to fund a refurbishment program at a local junior high school. Like the Hebron program, it donates the computers to schools in needy areas. The initiative is on track to donate 100 computers by next June and 80-100 computers every year after that, says Fu-Chuan Shih, a member of the Kaohsiung club.

With guidance, the students fix up the old machines themselves. “We let the students personally disassemble the computers, clean them internally, reinstall and test the software, reassemble them, and carry out the final sorting and packaging,” Shih says. “In addition to allowing students to make a practical contribution to environmental protection, it is hoped that their demand for information equipment will no longer be just a blind pursuit of speed and efficiency but also reflect a concern for the environment.”

In Italy, members of the Rotaract Club of Milano Sforza are four years into a grant-funded refurbishing program launched during the COVID-19 pandemic. “In the COVID period, a lot of young people needed computers and other devices in order to [join online classes] and do their homework,” says Gianluca Cocca, the club’s service projects chair. “I have a technical background, so I said, ‘OK, let’s do it. We’ll start a whole new service.’”

Cocca had to teach his fellow members how to refurbish the machines they collected, but now more than 100 people contribute to the project. The club members clean the computers inside and out and upgrade some components, such as hard drives, that are too old to keep up with current computing demands. They then donate the equipment to nonprofit organizations in the area.

The only problem? Fewer and fewer devices can be refurbished. “A computer made 10 years ago is totally perfect once it’s regenerated with good software and some upgrade of the hardware. It’s fine for Zoom meetings, things like that,” Cocca says. “But updating a smartphone is really difficult. We can do nothing with the hardware.”

Eco-friendly electronics

That’s because the phones — and increasingly tablets and laptops — aren’t designed to be upgraded when their technology starts to lag. Often, smartphone repairs are very difficult or impossible because you can’t remove and replace components without damaging other parts of the device. Manufacturers want to force people to buy new equipment regularly, says Brandon Smith, a member of the Rotary Club of Wenatchee Confluence in Washington and the owner of an IT consulting company. “It’s planned obsolescence. Manufacturers do stuff like using industrial adhesive on the glass on the back of a phone. When that breaks, you have to chip it out one piece at a time,” says Smith, whose club led a computer recycling event on Earth Day last year.


Image credit: Olivier Asselin/Alamy Stock Photo

There are exceptions among manufacturers, though, at least where computers are concerned. Smith recommends that ecologically minded consumers buy from companies that design their machines to be repairable and upgradable. However, he adds, not many manufacturers do this. One is called Framework. “Framework built [its] platform to be fully upgradable, no matter what,” he says. “You can change out the keyboard. You can change out the trackpad. You can change out the ports. You can change out the screen. It’s pretty cool.”

There’s no real cure for the e-waste problem, experts like Broschรฉ say, except to make the whole life cycle of consumer electronics more eco-friendly. Unfortunately, the very existence of the problem comes as a surprise to many. Glustrom remembers how shocked he was when Amro told his club about the computers burned in the West Bank. Though Glustrom is proud of what their pilot project accomplished, he acknowledges that such efforts are just a small part of what needs to be a much more comprehensive movement.

“We have a throwaway society. That’s our consciousness. And we need to somehow get to a more circular economy,” Glustrom says. “But we’re running out of space and time in our environment, and we just can’t live this way any longer. We’ve got to make a switch.”

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


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https://www.rotary.org/en/burning-issue-e-waste