Local Help Crawley Charity

 

Here At Last

Your Charity

Yes Crawley (West Sussex) Residents Only

We have been Listening to YOU

 

For some time we have been aware that there is a desperate need for HELP in Crawley and wherever possible we have been catering for that need.

Crawley Happy Times (CHT) and Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club (GDRC) have joined forces to create a dedicated Charity and website to help the people of Crawley.

If you are a resident of Crawley we need your help to raise funds for those less fortunate than ourselves who live in Crawley that may need our help.  Maybe as well as donating you might also be able to spare some of your valuable time to help us.

You can rest assured that if you give money to Local Help Crawley (LHC) it will only go to worthy causes in Crawley.

Rotary is a well known organisation (Established over 100 Years Ago) with over 30,000 Clubs throughout the world and every penny raised by Rotary goes to the designated Charity for onward distribution. Rotary already have a well established relationship with the community of Crawley which will go along way to making this new project very successful and beneficial.

CHT has become a trusted source of local information on news, events and positive feedback for Crawley. http://www.crawleyhappytimes.co.uk/ has a combined readership of well over 50,000 on a monthly basis and is growing on a week by week basis. We feel CHT have their finger on the pulse of the people and therefore are a great source for hearing, or being informed of, needy causes which Local Help Crawley may be able to assist with.

As more and more people use the internet on a daily basis Crawley Happy Times is the perfect medium for keeping Crawley residents informed on what is happening in our town.

This is why CHT and GDRC are the perfect partnership for this new project.

We look forward to hearing from you if you feel you would like to be involved in any aspect of Local Help Crawley….a modern charity for a modern town.

CHT Email: editor@crawleyhappytimes.co.uk  or Call 01293 572182

GDRC Email: smita.bhatia.inbox@gmail.com or Call 07404 041607

LHC Email: info@localhelpcrawley.co.uk

Circus Starr Tickets find good home – Updated 20/01/2012

 

Trike Stolen then Destroyed by Vandals

 

 

We were given 4 tickets to the Circus Starr Winter Tour 2012 in Crawley Tues 17/01/12 at 16.45pm & 19.00pm at The Haven Centre, Hophurst Lane, Crawley Down, West Sussex, RH10 4LJ Charity: St Catherine’s Hospice and were looking for a worthy cause to give them to.

PLEASE CLICK ON PICTURE BELOW

We asked our friends at Crawley Happy Times if they knew anyone who deserved the tickets and they came up trumps with the following.
Sharon Quinn wrote to Crawley Happy Times saying: Hi.
I wonder if you could please help me. Our little Harry is disabled and can not walk at all. He has spinal cerebella Syndrome. He had a special needs trike which he loved so much. It really helped with the muscles in Harrys legs. It was stolen from his school last night. I wondered if you could ask every one you know if they have seen or heard any thing and if they could please keep there eyes and ears open. I have some lovely pictures of Harry on his trike. Harry loved going on his trike as all the other children at school went on bikes at break time. Harry used to get upset about this so we sent his trike to school . When Harry went to go on his trike this morning it wasn’t there. The padlock had been cut. He’s been sobbing at school. I hope you can help. Kind regards. Sharon, Kev and our little H.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Crawley Happy Times UPDATE: The bike has now been found, but sadly it has been destroyed beyond repair. Sharon is hoping to claim off the schools insurance but if anyone has any information about the people who took this bike from a school which caters for the disabled, please call 101 and inform the police. Thank you for all your help in this matter x

12/01/2012 Just back from meeting the most wonderful people. We went round with our dear friend Geoff Williamson of Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club who donated 4 tickets to Harry who is 13 today. Happy Birthday Harry! You may know Harry as he is the young man who had his trike stolen and destroyed. His lovely Mum Sharon Quinn and her partner Kevin were overwhelmed and very grateful. We had a little chat with them too, which we’ll show you tomorrow. Thank you for the piece of yummy cake Harry. We are off to the Harvester in the Leisure park now to test out their new menu…yum yum, oh and to see our good friend Darren Hawes. Be good

Sharon Quinn replied :- a very big thank u Shelley. and Geoff from the rotary club. for the tickets. it was so nice to meet you both and Shelley u are a great lady. its nice to put a face to the name. yr kindness will always be remembered. speak very soon. shaz, kev and little H. x

PLEASE CLICK ON PICTURE BELOW to view YouTube Video of Presentation

If you would like to help raise funds to buy a replacement trike as a result of this pointless vandalism please contact Shelley Facence-Traynor at Crawley Happy Times

A Gift For Harry

PLEASE CLICK ON PICTURE BELOW

 

The End of Polio

Polio – a disease which has disabled millions and pulled people further into poverty – has been reduced by 99% over the past 25 years.

Global efforts have delivered incredible progress: immunising more than 2 billion children and saving more than 5 million children from life-long paralysis or death.

This January, the world will reach a remarkable milestone in the fight to eradicate polio – 12 months without a case of polio in India for the first time in history.

But progress towards eradication is at risk: with the critical work of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative constrained by a $535 million funding gap – threatening international polio eradication efforts.

That’s why the Global Poverty Project is working with partners to support Global Polio Eradication Initiative, and make the end of polio reality.

PLEASE CLICK ON PICTURE BELOW

PLEASE CLICK BELOW TO SIGN THE PETITION

Dear World Leaders,

We call for your support to help eradicate the second human disease in history.

We call on you to fully fund the critical work of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, which will provide vaccines for hundreds of millions of the world’s poorest children and support health workers to protect future generations from this debilitating disease.

 

2011 Royal British Legion Poppy Appeal (our best so far)

 

The Royal British Legion celebrates its 90th anniversary in 2011.

 

The Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club are pleased to announce that we  exceeded last years record of £1616 by over 37%

The total amount raused by us this year was £2220 and we have been advised that this even exceeded the amount raised at Sainsbury’s.  Well done to all those Members who gave up their valuable time to help with this worthy cause.

***********************************************************************************************

The Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club have been asked again to help The Royal British Legion Poppy Appeal.

The venue this year is the whole of the B&Q, Carpet Right & Matalan Car Park on the London Road in Crawley

The collections will take place between Saturday 29th October 2011 and Friday 11th November 2011 between 9am and 4pm

We are pleased to announce that through the efforts of the Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club over £1600 was raised during Last Years Poppy Appeal.

We are now drawing up a rota for this event and would ask you to all check your diaries to see if you can spare us some time.

If you are able to help please reply to Ernest Izard maltacross2002@yahoo.co.uk with dates, times available, your name and address (for the Royal British Legion) and car registration no (For a Car Park Waiver).

Could you please also send a copy email to margaretwilliamson@gatwickdiamondrotary.org

We are hoping to make this our best ever collection year for the Royal British Legion

In 2009 we raised £305

In 2010 we raised £1616

Please help us break last year’s figure

World Polio Day 24th October

 

Welcome to the World Polio Day Information

Please give generously.

 

 

With the Publics help, Rotary have made tremendous progress in the fight to eradicate Polio. We are at an historic moment — less than 1% away from the end of Polio forever. In honor of World Polio Day on 24 October 2011, we are asking for your help by Donating to The Rotary “END POLIO NOW” campaign and to ask you to pass on the word to all your friends about Rotary’s achievements in order to help them finish the job.

 If you would like to make an immediate contribution the details are as follows:

RBS Crawley, UK
Sort Code 16-17-25 Account No. 10133361
Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club. Charity Account

Please send us a confirmation email to margaretwilliamson@gatwickdiamondrotray.org with “END POLIO NOW in the header and the amount deposited so we can thank you for your support.

Every year, in October we commemorate the birth of Jonas Salk, developer of the first safe and effective polio vaccine.

On Monday, 24 October, 2011 it is World Polio Day – a perfect opportunity to join the fight to end the disease.

The goal of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative is to ensure that no child will ever again know the crippling effects of polio. The Global Polio Eradication Initiative is the largest public health initiative the world has ever known.

After 20 years of hard work, Rotary and its partners are on the brink of eradicating Polio, but a strong push is needed now to root it out once and for all. It is a window of opportunity of historic proportions.

Rotary’s US$200 Million Challenge is the Rotary Foundation’s response to the two grants totaling $355 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to help eradicate polio. Every dollar given to PolioPlus will be counted toward the $200 million match, which must be completed by 30 June 2012.

The resulting $555 million will directly support immunization campaigns in developing countries, where polio continues to infect and paralyze children, robbing them of their futures and compounding the hardships faced by their families.

Your contribution will help Rotary raise $200 million to match $355 million.

As long as polio threatens even one child anywhere in the world, children everywhere remain at risk. The stakes are that high.

“If we all have the fortitude to see this effort through to the end, then we will eradicate polio.” — Bill Gates, cochair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Since 1988, Rotary International and its partners in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) — the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — have worked to wipe polio from the face of the earth. A volunteer service organization of 1.2 million men and women, Rotary began immunizing children against polio in 1985 and became a spearheading partner in the GPEI three years later.

Rotary’s main responsibilities are fundraising, advocacy, and volunteer recruitment. To date, Rotary has contributed more than US$900 million to the polio eradication effort.

With over 33,000 clubs in more than 200 countries and geographical areas, Rotary is able to reach out to national governments worldwide to generate crucial financial and technical support for polio eradication. Since 1995, the advocacy efforts of Rotary and its partners have helped raise more than $8 billion from donor governments.

Rotary clubs also provide “sweat equity” on the ground in polio-affected communities, which helps ensure that leaders at all levels remain focused on the eradication goal. Rotary club members have volunteered their time and personal resources to reach more than two billion children in 122 countries with the oral polio vaccine.

Thanks to Rotary and its partners, the world has seen polio cases plummet by more than 99 percent, preventing five million instances of child paralysis and 250,000 deaths. When Rotary began its eradication work, polio infected more than 350,000 children annually. In 2009, fewer than 1,700 cases were reported worldwide.

But the polio cases represented by that final 1 percent are the most difficult and expensive to prevent. Challenges include geographic isolation, worker fatigue, armed conflict, and cultural barriers.

That’s why it’s so important to generate the funding needed to End Polio Now. To fail is to invite a polio resurgence that would condemn millions of children to lifelong paralysis in the years ahead.

The bottom line is this: As long as polio threatens even one child anywhere in the world, all children — wherever they live — remain at risk.

 

 

Contributions will be accepted till the 30th June 2012

 

 

 

Press Release date:             24th October 2011

Media contact:          Geoff Williamson, 01293-885833, geoffwilliamson@gatwickdiamondrotary.org

Local Rotary clubs log on to support World Polio Day

Rotarians from the Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club and across Great Britain and Ireland are publicising World Polio Day, Monday 24th October, by harnessing the power of social media.

On this date, members will post polio stories to their social network sites, such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and so on, including the following hashtag phrase in their message:

#rotaryendpolio

The inclusion of this phrase in every post will help create an active online discussion which will draw attention to the drive to eradicate polio. Adding comments to online news sites will also help boost the discussion.

President of the Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club, Dr. Mansour Jumaa says everyone can be part of the activity: “This is a great way to help raise awareness of polio and support a fantastic cause. Just 30 seconds to post a message, tweet or comment on a polio story with the hashtag #rotaryendpolio will make a big difference.

“We want people to know how close we are to eradicating this terrible disease from the world and how much we need their help to wipe out that final 1 percent. Rotary, in partnership with other health organisations, has achieved a tremendous amount since starting the drive to end polio in 1985. Instead of thousands of cases a month across 125 endemic countries, there are now barely a thousand a year and four endemic countries. The lives of over two billion children have been saved thanks to the Rotary campaign, End Polio Now. Although great news, we are not complacent. The campaign will keep going until polio is gone for good.

“I am blogging, tweeting and putting messages on Facebook to keep this campaign in the spotlight. I urge everyone to log on and help #rotaryendpolio.”

Members of Rotary Clubs Worldwide are going out to India in November to help with a National Immunisation Day. They will be administering the polio vaccine to young children, to protect them from the virus. This is how committed Rotarians are to consigning the disease to the history books.

Join in the campaign by blogging, commenting and tweeting on social network sites, quoting #rotaryendpolio.

For more information, visit http://www.gatwickdiamondrotary.org/2011/10/world-polio-day-24th-october/

Discover your local Rotary club ( Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club ) and make new friends whilst improving the lives of others.

ENDS

NOTES FOR EDITORS

About Rotary

Rotary International in Great Britain & Ireland (RIBI), part of Rotary International, has 1845 clubs and more than 55,000 members.

Rotary International was founded in 1905 in Chicago and is now the world’s largest international service organisation with 1.2 million professional men and women as members. There are 33,000 clubs in 200 countries and geographical areas.

Rotary clubs are open to men and women of all ages who are business, professional or community leaders and who want to use their experience for the benefit of others.

Rotary initiates local and global projects to promote world understanding and peace and improve life conditions for people of all ages and cultures. To find out more, visit www.ribi.org. or www gatwickdiamondrotary.org

About polio

Since pledging in 1985 to eradicate polio, Rotary and other health organisations have
made tremendous strides. Where there were once 125 endemic countries, there are now just four: India, Pakistan, Nigeria and Afghanistan.

The campaign to fight polio is supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation which has donated $355m in challenge grants. Rotary will match their generous donations by raising $200m by June 2012. The generosity of Bill and Melinda Gates is very much appreciated.

Rotary is the largest private sector contributor to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, with partners including the World Health Organisation and UNICEF, which battles against a number of difficulties including geographic isolation, armed conflict, cultural barriers, worker fatigue and poverty.

Rotary clubs in Great Britain and Ireland have donated more than £16.5 million (US$26.5 million) to polio immunisation initiatives. Rotary members worldwide have so far raised US $900 million to fund polio immunisation activities and every penny raised goes to the project. Rotarians all work on a purely voluntary basis so funds are not drained away in administration costs.

Money raised goes towards funding national immunisation drives for all children under age five in endemic and high risk countries, as well as tracking possible incidences of the disease, measures to control outbreaks and improving public health infrastructures.

Pacific Tsunami (Japan)

Disaster strikes japan as massive Earthquake under sea off japan causes 30 foot Tsunami

We are raising funds for Shelter Boxes and Water Aid products
Anything you can do to help will be appreciated.


If you would like to make an immediate contribution the details are as follows:

RBS Crawley, UK

Sort Code 16-17-25 Account No. 10133361

Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club. Charity Account

Please send us a confirmation email with amount deposited so we can thank you.
For more information see below

A massive tsunami tore through northeastern Japan, swallowing everything in its path and dragging, ships, cars and houses out to sea.

In Miyako city, in Iwate prefecture, tsunami waves barrelled into a narrow bay, sending water surging over an embankment and hurling ships in to buildings.

Houses, cars, trees and anything else that stood in the way was churned up and became part of the advancing morass, adding to its destructive power as it moved hundreds of yards inland

*****************************************************************************************************************************

The 30 foot high tsunami was triggered by an offshore earthquake of a magnitude 8.9 and was followed by more than 50 aftershocks

The 30 foot high tsunami was triggered by an offshore earthquake of a magnitude 8.9 and was followed by more than 50 aftershocks

Japan’s most powerful earthquake since records began has struck the north-east coast, triggering a massive tsunami.

Cars, ships and buildings were swept away by a wall of water after the 8.9-magnitude tremor, which struck about 400km (250 miles) north-east of Tokyo.

A state of emergency has been declared at a nuclear power plant, where pressure has exceeded normal levels.

Officials say 350 people are dead and about 500 missing, but it is feared the final death toll will be much higher.

In one ward alone in Sendai, a port city in Miyagi prefecture, 200 to 300 bodies were found.

*****************************************************************************************************

In the centre of Tokyo many people are spending the night in their offices. But thousands, perhaps millions, chose to walk home. Train services were suspended.

Even after the most violent earthquake anyone could remember the crowds were orderly and calm. The devastation is further to the north, along the Pacific coast.

There a tsunami triggered by the quake reached 10km (six miles) inland in places carrying houses, buildings, boats and cars with it. In the city of Sendai the police found up to 300 bodies in a single ward. Outside the city in a built-up area a fire blazed across several kilometres.

Japan’s ground self-defence forces have been deployed, and the government has asked the US military based in the country for help. The scale of destruction from the biggest quake ever recorded in Japan will become clear only at first light.

The quake was the fifth-largest in the world since 1900 and nearly 8,000 times stronger than the one which devastated Christchurch, New Zealand, last month, said scientists.

Thousands of people living near the Fukushima nuclear power plant have been ordered to evacuate.

Japanese nuclear officials said pressure inside a boiling water reactor at the plant was running much higher than normal after the cooling system failed.

Officials said they might need to deliberately release some radioactive steam to relieve pressure, but that there would be no health risk.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had earlier said the US Air Force had flown emergency coolant to the site.

But US officials later said no coolant had been handed over because the Japanese had decided to handle the situation themselves.

The UN’s nuclear agency said four nuclear power plants had shut down safely.

Measured at 8.9 by the US Geological Survey, it struck at 1446 local time (0546 GMT) at a depth of about 24km. 

*************************************************************************************************

The tsunami rolled across the Pacific at 800km/h (500mph) – as fast as a jetliner – before hitting Hawaii and the US West Coast, but there were no reports of major damage from those regions.

Thousands of people were ordered to evacuate coastal areas in the states of California, Oregon and Washington.

The biggest waves of more than 6-7ft (about 2m) were recorded near California’s Crescent City, said the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre.

A tsunami warning extended across the Pacific to North and South America, where many other coastal regions were evacuated, but the alert was later lifted in most parts, including the Philippines, Australia and China.

Strong waves hit Japan’s Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures, damaging dozens of coastal communities.

A 10m wave struck Sendai, deluging farmland and sweeping cars across the airport’s runway. Fires broke out in the centre of the city.

We are looking for help to raise funds for the Rotary Tsunami Appeal. Please help .
Full details at the top of the page.

Help us Support Local Causes

 

Every Year we raise money for Local Causes.
The 2010/2011 Causes are Crawley Open House, Down’s Syndrome and Home Start Crawley & Horsham.

 

 

If you would like to make an immediate contribution the details are as follows:
RBS Crawley, UK
Sort Code 16-17-25 Account No. 10133361
Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club. Charity Account

Please send us a confirmation email with amount deposited so we can thank you.

 

Please help us raise funds for worthwhile causes

Each year the Club President chooses a Charity/Charities to support Locally for the next 12 months.

We are pleased to announce that Crawley Open House, Down’s Syndrome and Home-Start Crawley & Horsham are this years chosen Charities.

Over 30 Miilion Pounds are raised each year for Charity in the UK alone so please help our Club by donating generously to the Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club so we can support our chosen Charities.

We are approached on a regular basis to help individual worthy cases in crawley but to date we have not had sufficient funds to help. With your help we could start to respond to these individual cases.

In late November and early December 2010 we will be collection around the Maidenbower, Pound Hill and Worth Areas.

For more information click on events at the top of the page

 

Pakistan Floods Appeal :- Updated 16th August 2010

 

 

 

Urgent help needed for survivors in Pakistan.

 

 

We are raising funds for Shelter Boxes and Water Aid products for the 20,000,000 affected by the Floods

Anything you can do to help will save lives.
If you would like to make an immediate contribution the details are as follows:
RBS Crawley, UK
Sort Code 16-17-25 Account No. 10133361
Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club. Charity Account

Please send us a confirmation email with amount deposited so we can thank you.
For more information see below

Up to 3.5 million children are at high risk from deadly water-borne diseases

“People say they are not getting help from the army or the government”
Pakistan’s worst flooding in nearly a century has now affected more than twenty million people and left at least 1,600 dead, says the UN.

6 miilion require Food Aid and 722,000 hames have been damaged or destroyed

While floods in the north-west began to recede, the vast body of water has been moving down the country into new parts of Punjab and menacing Sindh province.

All wells have been contaminated and water-borne diseases have been spreading, officials say.

The region is midway through monsoon season and more rain is forecast.

“What we are facing now is a major catastrophe. We are afraid it will get worse”
Manuel Bessler United Nations

The number of affected districts in Punjab has reached seven, while 350,000 people have been moved from neighbouring Sindh province, most of which is on high alert, the United Nations said.

Manuel Bessler, who heads the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Pakistan, told a news conference in Geneva: “What we are facing now is a major catastrophe.”

He added: “We are only in the middle of the monsoon season, there is more rain expected. We are afraid it will get worse.”

With crops, homes, roads and bridges washed away, the human exodus continued on Thursday as yet more torrential rain fell.

In the worst-affected areas, houses, shops, petrol pumps and small villages have been submerged.

Fleeing villagers have waded barefoot through water up to their necks and chests, carrying belongings on their heads.

In Punjab, known as Pakistan’s “breadbasket” for its rich agriculture, more than 1,300 villages have been affected and at least 25,000 homes destroyed, said disaster relief officials in the province.

Rotary Clubs are famous for responding instantly to Emergencies and this is no exception.

All funds raised by us will go towards Water-Survival Boxes and Shelter Boxes both of which will be distributed via the Rotary Clubs in Pakistan.

Water-Survival Boxes
There is a continued need for Water-Survival Boxes to families at high risk of the cholera epidemic

The most urgent single problem facing the relief agencies is the provision of a supply of safe drinking-water.

During and in the aftermath of many natural disasters, water-borne diseases from contaminated sources threaten to kill even more victims than the initial disaster.

As well as having a bad odour and taste, contaminated water can contain micro organisms that cause diseases such as cholera, dysentery, typhoid and hepatitis.

World Water Works is dedicated to helping people escape the stranglehold of disease and poverty caused by disasters which destroy their homes and possessions and leave them without safe water and sanitation.

What’s in it?
The box is filled with new items that people who have lost everything would need to survive.

They include a container to collect water, mugs to drink out of, cooking pots, bowls to eat from, spoons, anti-septic spray, cotton materials and needles and thread to make basic clothes. Basic tools, Tarpaulin and bungee cords to make simple shelter and also included.

The product can be precisely tailored to suit the disaster area, so that it targets the immediate need of drinking, eating and cooking.

Shelter Boxes

Each box will provide shelter and warmth for up to ten people for a prolonged period. Each box will be uniform in size, weight and content and will contain a high quality 10 person funnel tent, manufactured from modern lightweight but resilient & robust materials, plus 10 high quality durable sleeping bags, some ancillary equipment, including spade, torch, ropes, etc.

All equipment will be new and unused and has been selected for its usefulness and quality and will have a long and useful life once distributed by international aid agencies. These robust standardised multi-functional Shelter Boxes are secure, easily stored and transported and once on site can be used in many other varied and useful ways…….water, storage, baby’s cot, table, etc

More information on Water-Survival Boxes and Shelter Boxes (both Rotary initiatives) can be found under the Donations Category

WaterAid 25 years of partnership

 

 

2010-11 sees the 25th anniversary of WaterAid’s partnership with Rotary International (RIBI).

 

 

Since 1985, RIBI has raised in excess of £2.7 million to support WaterAid’s vital work. These vital,000have helped WaterAid reach out to approximately 180i8o,000 people, transforming lives by improving access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene. We would like to thank you sincerely for your support
The formidable partnership was initiated by the then RIBI International Chairman Doug Muncey, who was looking for an organisation that Rotarians in Great Britain and Ireland could work with. He wanted to make a difference to the lives of people in Africa on a long term basis and recognised WaterAid as an organisation that was effectively doing this.
Throughout the past 25 years, at club, district and national level, Rotarians have been doing fantastic work to meet impressive fundraising targets. Thanks to this vital support hundreds of thousands of lives have been improved in Tanzania and other focus countries. In the last year, WaterAid projects in Tanzania alone reached 63,482 people with safe water, 3,722 with improved sanitation and 48,666 with hygiene messages.

Letter from John Kenny President of Rotary International 2009-10 – June 2010
Water is one of the basic necessities of life, yet today, nearly 20 percent of the world’s population lack access to clean, safe drinking water, and nearly 40 percent live without basic sanitation facilities. Tragically, these factors result in the deaths of about 6,000 people each day, and impede communities around the world in their efforts to escape poverty.
I think that water is going to be the most important commodity in the 21st century. In many regions of the world, differential access to water could lead to conflict, and undermine our peace building efforts.
For the past 25 years, Rotarians in RIBI have been working diligently to combat these dire statistics with the help of our friends at WaterAid, a UK charity dedicated to transforming lives in the world’s poorest communities by improving access to safe water, and sanitation. In 1992, as President of RIBI, I visited some of WaterAid’s project sites in Tanzania and witnessed firsthand the incredible impact that safe water made in the lives of the people there. I am proud to say that thanks to the support WaterAid has received from RIBI Rotarians over the past few years, more than 160,000 people in Tanzania have been empowered through the provision of safe water, sanitation and hygiene education.
I am thankful for the vital service that RIBI and WaterAid have carried out through this collaboration. There is much work still to be done, and through our continued efforts to expand access to the basic necessities of safe water and sanWaterAidwe can make a meaningful difference in the lives of people everywhere.
Kindest regards,
John Kenny
President, Rotary International