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Volunteer teaches Turkish earthquake survivors

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Rotary Volunteer Margaret Curtis gets students involved during class at Sarayli Primary School in Değirmendere, Turkey. Photo courtesy of Curtis.

When Margaret Curtis, a retired professor, began looking for an opportunity to teach English as a second language overseas, she turned to Rotary. Her Rotary Volunteer experience would take her to a community that had survived one of the deadliest earthquakes in recent memory.

Searching for volunteer openings on the RI Web site, she found a program posted by local Rotarians that would require her to teach for about four weeks at Sarayli Primary School in Değirmendere, Turkey. Located in the country’s northern coastal area, Değirmendere was near the epicenter of the İzmit earthquake on 17 August 1999, a disaster that lasted less than one minute but claimed more than 17,000 lives and left thousands homeless.

In July 2007, Curtis taught English to two classes of 10- to 13-year-olds who had survived the disaster. “They were too young to remember the horror of it all, but the lives of their families were forever changed,” says the member of the Rotary Club of Bowling Green, Kentucky, USA.  

A professor emeritus of religion and philosophy at Western Kentucky University, Curtis was used to the classroom setting, but in Değirmendere, she faced a few challenges. Loud bleating goats outside the school, for example, competed for the students’ attention.

On one occasion, she noticed some 16-year-old girls trying to listen in on the class from outside. She invited them to help tutor the younger students. It quickly became “a slick operation, with helpers and children all joining in enthusiastically and everyone benefiting from the learning process,” says Curtis. “To my amazement, the teaching methods worked, and the children started to speak very nice English.”

The Bowling Green club donated supplies including posters, activity books, pens, and stickers, and members of the Rotary Club of Kocaeli-Gölcük, who had arranged Curtis’s volunteer trip, invited her into their homes. “I have experienced a camaraderie and warm fellowship that extends way beyond language and culture,” she says.

It all added up to an unforgettable journey. “I could never have imagined how much fun and excitement the children would bring into my life,” she says.

This article appeared in the April issue of Rotary World .


7 Comments:
At 8:50AM on 17 June 2008, Farooq Riaz Chaudhry wrote: excillent job
At 12:13PM on 15 June 2008, PRAMOD MATHUR wrote: wonderful work by margret curtis, we rotarians of Dist.3290 salute for your work .we thank rotarians of rotary club of Kocack-golcuk for their support.
At 3:50PM on 13 June 2008, RTN CHRISTY OPARA wrote: I am proud to be a Rotarian. The assistance of Rotarians to flood victims and other problems speak volumes
At 12:45PM on 13 June 2008, reha yardim wrote: it was a wonderful project connected different cultures with a miracle touch of Margaret and gölcuk R.C hosspitality... thanks margaret,thanks Rotary
At 10:50AM on 13 June 2008, Serpil Tural wrote: I am a friend of Margaret from RC of Golcuk D.2420, I know Margaret is world citizen and she is very famous person not only in America but also in Turkey, Middle East, Europe, Brasil etc. Thank you very much Margaret for your friendship.
At 8:28AM on 11 June 2008, Mehmet Özarslan wrote: I am a Rotarian from Suadiye Rotary Club (Istanbul-Turkey). I am even more proud to be a Rotarian when I witness such wonderful events of solidarity among Rotarians from around the World. We may be distant geography wise but we are very close when it comes to service our World. Thank you Margaret Curtis for your benevolence! Thank you Joseph Derr for letting us know and thank you Rotary for bringing such services to life.
At 8:34AM on 11 June 2008, Amon Holcomb wrote: What a great oppurtunity for Ms Curtis to help out the people of Turkey. With this being a place of a terrible natural disaster Im sure the people really appreciated her gesture. And it sounds like the children did learn something from her as well.

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