Category: World Community Service

  • Volunteer Opportunities

    Volunteer Opportunities

    Meals on Wheels

    Join members of the Community Service Committee as they volunteer with Meals on Wheels. Rotarians volunteer the first Wednesday of each month delivering meals from IU Methodist to those in need. Two volunteers pick up the meals together and deliver them together. Contact Rotarian David Stamper to sign-up for 2021. 

    Gleaners Food Bank of Indiana

    Gleaners Food Bank of Indiana is in need of volunteers as the number of clients they serve has nearly tripled since March. Volunteers can view available shifts and register online at https://gleaners.volunteerhub.com/. If you would like to schedule a group of volunteers you can contact their Manager of Group Volunteers, Treva Burges.

  • Our Office Has Moved…..

    The Rotary Club of Indianapolis office is now located at the Glossbrenner Mansion. The new mailing address is 3202 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis, IN 46208 and the new phone number is 317-829-1041. Please update your records.

  • 2018 Indianapolis Rotary Foundation Annual Report

    2018 Indianapolis Rotary Foundation Annual Report

    The Rotary Foundation of Indianapolis is a private, stand-alone corporation that serves as the primary community charitable arm of the Rotary Club of Indianapolis.

    Annual contributions to the Foundation are added to an eternal endowment fund and allocated income from that fund is utilized to support grants for charitable and educational purposes, primarily in the Indianapolis and Central Indiana areas. Download the 2018 Annual Report.

  • World Community Service Committee donates $7,000 to the Give Hope, Fight Poverty

    World Community Service Committee donates $7,000 to the Give Hope, Fight Poverty

    2013-01-11 21.21.46-for-webSwaziland, Africa is a small country with a population that has been decimated by HIV/AIDS.  The AIDS pandemic, highest in the world, left over 120,000 orphans in its wake with a total population of only one million people.  The number of orphaned children exceeds the number of caretakers leaving the orphans to fend for themselves in child-headed homes.  Give Hope, Fight Poverty works holistically to ensure that the orphans receive a high quality education – but scholarships alone are insufficient.  The children need food, water, healthcare, shelter, and sanitation to stay in school and be successful in their pursuit of an education.

    The lack of proper sanitation and hygiene in rural Swazi communities has led to communicable disease, school absences, and entirely preventable death among children.  The Indianapolis Rotary Foundation played a crucial part in addressing the sanitation and hygiene needs of our orphans in two rural communities: Malindza Village and eLangeni Village.  The Indianapolis Rotary Foundation’s donation enabled us to attack the sanitation challenges three ways:

    1. We build pit latrine toilets strategically at schools and throughout the communities.
    2. We partner with local Swazi hotels to sanitize and distribute used soap to schools and child-headed homes.
    3. We distribute reusable sanitary pads to adolescent girls to ensure they are able to continue their education through their menstrual cycles.

    Teachers have been reporting increased attendance and we have not had a single case of Rotavirus since the beginning of this Rotary sponsored program.  We are excited to continue witnessing the progress and will continue the soap and sanitary pad program throughout the year.

    The photos are of our youngest cohort of orphans at our Malindza New Hope Children’s Centre (green uniforms), my husband sanitizing and reforming the used soaps with bleach and hot water, and one of the pit latrine toilet structures in almost finished condition (only the door needed hung).

    [Best_Wordpress_Gallery id=”7″ gal_title=”Swasiland”]

  • Kenya Global Grant CG# 1415381- Final Report

    Kenya Global Grant CG# 1415381- Final Report

    Your Rotary dollars at work! Investing is Kilimambogo Kenya!

    Support given by these Rotary Clubs and Districts:

    Edgbaston Convention
    Stratford-Upon-Avon
    District #1060 UK

    Indianapolis, IN, District #6560, USA

    Carlisle, PA, District #7390, USA

    Hanau, Germany
    Thika, Kenya

    Projects:
    -Truck for Rotary Dental Clinic
    -Portable Dental Unit
    -Water Sanitation
    -Water Irrigation
    -Septic System Installation
    -New Toilet Installation
    -60,000 Liter Rainwater Storage Tank

    Kenya Global Grant Final Report Feb 2016 PowerPoint

  • Mbita, Kenya

    Mbita, Kenya

    Rotary Indianapolis granted The Village Cooperative a grant to install a rain catchment system at our primary school in the rural village of Mbita, Kenya. We are undertaking a huge push to improve the lives of the widows in our program, their families, and the kids at the school. We have built over 40 new homes, provided clean water filters, built new latrines, and are in the process of installing rain catchment systems for each widow. The grant Rotary provided was a huge step for us…now the 100+ kids at the school, the teachers, and the administrators have access to rain water they can store and purify…drastically improving the health of the children. It takes many partners and much coordination to undertake a program of this side and we are proud to have Rotary has one of our partners.

  • Ceylan, Guatemala

    Ceylan, Guatemala

    Rotary Indianapolis granted The Village Cooperative a grant to be used in our food distribution program to the elderly and malnourished in the rural village of Ceylan, Guatemala. This is a project we have a hard time getting funding for, so this means a great deal to us and to the community. Each month we provide over 50 participants with nutritious, long lasting food supplies to help improve their standard of living. Many of our participants have been abandoned by their families and have no other means to eat. The rice, sugar, tea, pastas, beans, etc we provide is truly life saving. We truly appreciate Rotary’s support of this program.

  • Rotary World Community Service Team Doing Good in Eldoret

    From the director of laboratory services at Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Eldoret, Florence Tum:

    The Siemens Blood Gas Machine was received and will be installed. The Riley Mother and Baby Hospital now serves 20,000 mothers a year, with approximately 65 births a day including 16 Cesarean sections daily. Over 3000 babies are admitted to the newborn intensive care unit (NICU) annually, with a daily census in the NICU of approximately 100 babies. We operate about 20 CPAP machines (providing continuous positive airway pressure or CPAP) via nasal prongs at any given time. This is used to support babies (many of whom are premature) with respiratory distress. Survival rates are dramatically improved with CPAP. Now they will be able to monitor blood gases on tiny blood drops several times a day in each baby with respiratory distress, which will almost certainly improve survival and quality of survival.

    Also, donations have been received of five ventilators. These ventilators are ideally suited for use in an under-resourced setting such as in Kenya. With the installation of the blood gas machine in the laboratory at the Mother and Baby Hospital, they will now be able to consider introducing the ventilators into the NICU this coming year. They will need to train the staff to incubate newborn babies with greater efficiency, and to be able to manage the ventilators effectively.

    So we extend our sincere heartfelt thanks to everyone at Rotary for making all of this possible. Especially with all of the other news in our world, seeing the good that is done every day by people like yourselves – with Nick Reich and Kendall Millard, among others leading the way – it is reassuring and uplifting for all of our spirits.

  • Peace Education in Jamaica

    Peace Education in Jamaica

    Jamaica Follow the Leader“This is the best training I’ve ever attended,” said a veteran Jamaican teacher while participating in a Rotary International vocational training on peace and conflict resolution in Savannah La Mar Jamaica.

    The three day spring conference hosted over 90 participants who learned ways to peacefully resolve their conflicts while improving their classroom management techniques for better learning.

    A partnership between Savannah La Mar Rotary, and Rotary Districts 7020, 6490, and 6560, the project brought a team of six facilitators from Peace Learning Center in Indianapolis, Indiana USA, to implement the learning.  Peace Learning Center was co-founded by Rotarian Tim Nation in 1997 and its mission is to educate, inspire and empower people to live peacefully. The team also included James JT Taylor, a new Rotarian from the Indy Progressive Rotary.

    Jamaica Ferris PrimaryThe teachers assembled were challenged to reflect on why they are teachers, while exploring the root causes of many of the problems their students and communities face. “We must be the change we wish to see in the world,” they shared.

    Each day was packed with useful peacemaking methods that can be incorporated into the classroom including a peer mediation model called STEP – that asks each person in a conflict to Stay cool, Tell one point of view, Explore the other point of view and Problem solve.  Teachers also explored the concept of “counter aggression” and how to control anger when faced with difficult students.

    Participants received a Teach the Facilitator Manual and Jamaican Student Peace Education Workbook both printed and electronic, posters, learning guides and other materials to share with their students and colleagues.  Day three included small group work designing and implementing their own peace education workshop.

    Jamaica Small Group Work“I think this training should be mandatory for every existing and new teacher in Jamaica,” a high school teacher commented on the evaluation.  “Make this training part of our university teacher curriculum,” said another.

    Douglas Arnold, past president of Savannah La Mar Rotary and current assistant governor of District 7020 plans to build a Peace Learning Center Jamaica where teachers from throughout Jamaica can attend educational seminars and receive materials.

    Next the project will send a team of teachers from Jamaica to the Peace Learning Center in Indianapolis to become certified peace education facilitators who will be able to host groups at the new Peace Learning Center Jamaica and will be self-sufficient and sustainable.

    “Peace and conflict resolution is one of the main goals of Rotary International,” said Indianapolis Rotarian Tim Nation. “We are demonstrating to the world that peace is something everyone should share with each other, and our way out of current problems and strife.”

  • Indy Rotarian helps brings clean water to thousands

    By Mark Ambrogi

    farrarAs a youth growing up, Bill Farrar attended 10 work camps, some as a student and some as a counselor, with Carmel United Methodist Church.

    “I developed a passion helping other people,” the Carmel resident said. “There is nothing like being a help to other people. I’ve been blessed to be a blessing to others.”

    After being laid off from his job as mechanic at United Airlines after a facility shut down, Rev. Reid Walker invited Farrar to go help in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Walker thought Farrar could help in installing water purification systems to make the drinking water safe.

    In July 2009, Farrar, a 1978 Carmel High School graduate, founded Fountains of Hope International, which installs water purification systems in countries that need them. The purifier can treat 55 gallons per minute or 1,200 gallons in 20 minutes with 1/3 cup of salt.

    Read Full Story…