There are so many opportunities to change the world, says Ron D. Burton, president elect of Rotary International during an interaction in Chennai
“If I threw a dart on a world map blindfolded, and it
fell on a landmass anywhere (except for three countries) I will know
somebody there, and they will know me,” says Ron D. Burton, president
elect (2013-14), Rotary International. That’s the reach of Rotary, and
Rotarians, he says, are united in wanting to make the world a better
place. Rotary is not merely about meeting, greeting and eating, avers
Ron. “I want Rotarians around the world to get involved in some project,
locally or internationally”. And it is because of his long association
with Rotary (from 1979), he’s been able to forge partnerships with P.T.
Prabhakar (director, Rotary International, 2013-15) and V. Raja
Seenivasan (district governor) in Chennai, and impact the projects
they’re involved in.
Full Of Ideas Ron D. Burton Photo: S. R. Raghunathan
On a recent visit to the city —
Chennai being the first Indian city he is visiting as president elect —
Ron says there are so many wonderful projects in the country (he’s
especially impressed with ‘Happy Villages’), which will do well to be
emulated worldwide. He talks about being moved during his visit to the
blood bank where he saw Rotaracters donating blood, and in the next
room, Thallasemic children receiving a transfusion. “I thought, they
could be my children,” he says, moved. “And when I looked into their
eyes, it melted my heart.” And it’s this message that’s at the heart of
his theme for the year — ‘Engage Rotary, Change Lives’.
While
a life in service changes lives, the one it will change the most will
be yours, says Ron. He recalls a training programme in New Jersey, when a
gentleman walked up to him, with a picture of his three children, all
of whom had a congenital kidney disease, necessitating kidney
transplants. “The father told me that the oldest child got a kidney from
a donor, and the second, received a kidney from a member in his Rotary
club,” he said, adding he had many similar stories. “Every second, 1.2
million Rotary members worldwide are changing lives; what can we do if
we had 2.4million?” Monetary contribution accounts for 200 to 300
million dollars, annually, but if you put a value on the time that was
contributed by members, that number becomes astronomical!
Cheerful
and energetic, Ron recalls what initially seemed like a humungous task —
raising $ 120 million to eradicate polio back in 1987-88. Only, they
managed to raise more than double that, he laughs.
Early successes
But,
he acknowledges, there were a lot of early successes; and maybe they
lost focus, because, 26 years later, they’re still at it. “However, look
at a map with endemic polio countries (marked red) from 87-88 and look
at it now; the red has gradually bleached out to white.” The world
thought India would never get rid of polio, but Ron says he tips his hat
to the government of India and the Rotarians on the field, for their
commitment to eradicate the disease. “We’re this close, it’s time to
finish it,” he says, adding he will be back in India in January 2014,
when WHO is expected to certify India polio-free.
Source : The Hindu , 31st March 2013
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