Rotary.org: News - Foundation alumni empower communities in South Africa, India

Foundation alumni empower communities in South Africa, India

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Former Rotary Scholars and others celebrate the publication of Seed to Table at a book store in Cape Town. Clockwise from top: publisher Doreen Gowans, coauthor Nomnikelo Sontsanga, 2010-11 Rotary Scholar Abby Elsener, coauthor Nomkhita Sontsanga (Nomnikelo’s mother), 2010-11 Rotary Scholar Erin Koepke, 2010-11 Rotary Scholar Toni Marraccini. Photo courtesy of Erin Koepke

From developing a music program for at-risk children to generating employment opportunities for women in India, former Rotary Peace Fellows and Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholars are promoting economic development in regions that need it most. 

Yashar Keramati, a 2009-10 Ambassadorial Scholar from Canada, recently returned to Fisantekraal, South Africa, to launch his Peace & Love International initiative. “If it were not for the Foundation, I would not be able to have come here to do what I have been doing,” he says. 

With violence and drugs dominating the streets of Fisantekraal, Keramati says that young people have little opportunity for education and positive personal growth. Peace & Love International aims to create such opportunities through music.  

Workshops, held at least four times a week, offer dance practice and songwriting sessions. Through the songs, Keramati concentrates on important issues like drug awareness and respect for those of other genders and religions. 

“The goal of this initiative is to create a musical haven and nonthreatening space for the community’s youth, which they have been denied,” he says. “A highlight was one of our outings where we were invited to Cape Town’s biggest radio station to have our kids perform live on the air.” 

Elsewhere in South Africa, Erin Koepke, a 2010-11 Ambassadorial Scholar from the United States, partnered with Abalimi Bezekhaya, a nonprofit that introduces poor townships to sustainable food sources through urban farming. The effort resulted in a number of farmers selling their produce through the organization’s Harvest of Hope program.  

“I was eager to get involved with the organization, so I jumped at the opportunity to create an Abalimi-Harvest of Hope cookbook to sell as a way to market the program and provide an additional source of income to support their cause in Cape Town,” Koepke says. 

She teamed up with two other Ambassadorial Scholars and cooked with several farmers to learn traditional cuisine, using vegetables the farmers had grown. The resulting recipes were compiled into the Seed to Table cookbook. Net proceeds from sales of the book are donated to Abalimi Bezekhaya to help support organic microfarmers in Cape Town. 

“Abalimi-Harvest of Hope has inspired many to take ownership and pride in their community, leading to invaluable individual development,” Koepke says. 

Darshan Mundada, a 2008-10 Rotary Peace Fellow from India, applied his experience by developing a program in his country that helps rehabilitate former sex workers and integrate them into mainstream society. The program trains women to make tote bags out of recycled saris. The bags are sold to the public, serving as a source of income for the women. 

“Crafting these bags creates a safe and stable livelihood for these women,” says Mundada, who credits the Foundation with giving him the chance to sharpen his professional social work skills.

“My two years in the program made me aware of the global scale of problems that I was trying to tackle at local levels in India,” says Mundada, who studied at the University of North Carolina and Duke University in the United States. “Whether it’s issues in India or America, it helped me draw similarities across the globe.”

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3 Comments:
At 12:45PM on 3 August 2011, Cheryl Fletcher wrote: In our local Rotary District in California a group study team is being formed to go to S Korea to assist with children/ persons with disabilities. Unfortunately the top age level is 40/45 or I would sign up! I was a Rotary Ambassadorial scholar to the US a long time ago but believe that one of the most important things i learned from the experience was the importance of giving back. I am happy to read of the efforts of the two people cited above. I was also in India recently on a private visit with Rotary connections. The local Rotary District arranged for me to visit schools for the disabled and share advice, program suggestions etc especially for children with autism. i see this as an area of great need in many countries. I was also filled with admiration for the work being done by Rotary clubs and private individuals to help this population in India
At 10:06AM on 25 July 2011, Fred Pearson wrote: Steve, I believe you may be misunderstanding the intended change of GSE in Rotary. As I have experienced it in a future visions district 6400 around Detroit, it is replaced by a vocational exchange in which specific needed professions are represented in the exchange group, so that technical skills may be imparted as well as cultural understanding. It was great to have a top notch team of Australian literacy experts visit Detroit, for example, to help with our Rotary adult literacy initiative. By the same token our outbound group of expert midwives and pharmacists did great service and cultural exchanges in East Timor. I think the new thrust just adds focus to the GSE legacy. President Fred, Detroit Rotary Club
At 10:04AM on 21 July 2011, Steve Coleman wrote: While ambassadorial scholarships are a wonderful outreach bringing people and nations together another vital program of The Rotary Foundation that reaches far more people to bridge divides between countries and cultures is being lost. Under Future Vision in its present form Group Study Exchange or GSE is being dropped as a Foundation program. If you feel as many of us feel that without Foundation support GSE will either die or become little more than a friendship exchange between those districts with the financial ability to fund it themselves please join our efforts at www.SaveGSE.org .

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