ROTARY INTERNATIONAL
Rotary International is an international service organization whose stated purpose Listobringtogetherbusinessandprofessional leaders in order to provide humanitarian services, encourage high ethical standards in all vocations,andtoadvance goodwill and peace around the world. It is a non-political and non-sectarian organization open to all people regardless of race, color, creed, religion, gender, or political preference. There are 34,282 member clubs worldwide, and 1.2 million individuals, known as Rotarians, have joined.
Rotarians usually gather weekly for breakfast, lunch, or dinner to fulfill their first guiding principle to develop friendships as an opportunity for service. “It is the duty of all Rotarians,” states their Manual of Procedure,”outside their clubs, to be active as individuals in as many legally constituted groups and organizations as possible to promote, not only in words but through exemplary dedication, awareness of thedignity of all people and the respect of the consequent human rights of the individual.” The Rotarian’s primary motto is “Service Above Self”; its secondary motto is “One profits most who serves best.
Philosophy:
The object of Rotary is to encourage and foster the ideal of service as a basis of worthy enterprise and, in particular, to encourage andfoster:
The development of acquaintance as an opportunity for service
High ethical standards in business and professions, the recognition of the worthiness of all useful occupations, and the dignifying of each Rotarian’s occupation as an opportunity to serve society;
The application of the ideal of service in each Rotarian’s personal, business, and community life;
The advancement of international understanding, goodwill, and peace through a world fellowship of business and professional persons united in the ideal of service.
This objective is set against the “Rotary 4-Way Test”, used to see if a planned action is compatible with the Rotarian spirit. The test was developed by Rotarian and entrepreneur Herbert J. Taylor during the Great Depression as a set of guidelines for restoring faltering businesses and was adopted as the standard of ethics by Rotary in 1942. It is still seen as a standard for ethics in business management. The 4-Way Test considers the following questions in respect to thinking, saying or doing:
- Is it the truth?
- Will it build goodwill and better friendships?
- Is it fair to all concerned?
- Will it be beneficial to all concerned?
History
The first years of the Rotary Club
Silvester meeting February Harris’s The first friend of Schiele 23, Rotary three 1905. Gustave (a Club business In coal addition was merchant), Loehr’s acquaintances formed to office Harris and when in and Hiram the in attorneyLoehr downtown Unity E. Shorey (a mining PaulBuilding (a Chicago,P.tailor) engineer Harrison Dearborn were Unitedcalledand the freemason),togetherStates,other Streettwoonata
who attended this first meeting. The members chose the nameRotarybecauseinitially they rotated subsequent weekly club meetings to each other’s offices, although within a year, the Chicago club became so large it became necessary to adopt the now-common practice of a regular meeting place.
The next four Rotary Clubs were organized in cities in the western United States, beginning with San Francisco, then Oakland, Seattle, and Los Angeles. The National
Association of Rotary Clubs in America was formed in 1910. On November 3, 1910, a Rotary club began meeting in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, the beginning of the organisation’s internationality. On 22 February 1911, the first meeting of the Rotary Club Dublin was held in Dublin, Ireland. This was the first club established outside of North America. In April 1912, Rotary chartered the Winnipeg club marking the first establishment of an American-style service club outside the United States. To reflect the addition of a club outside of the United States, the name was changed to the International Association of Rotary Clubs in 1912.
In August 1912, the Rotary Club of London received its charter from the Association, marking the first acknowledged Rotary club outside North America. It later became known that the Dublin club in Ireland was organized before the London club, but the Dublin club did not receive its charter until after the London club was chartered. During World War I, Rotary in Britain increased from 9 to 22 clubs, and other early clubs in other nations included those in Cuba in 1916, Philippines in 1919 and India in 1920.
In 1922, the name was changed to Rotary International. By 1925, Rotary had grown to 200 clubs with more than 20,000 members.
World War II era in Europe:
Rotary Clubs in Spain ceased to operate shortly after the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War.
Clubs were disbanded across Europe as follows:
- Netherlands (1923)
- Czechoslovakia (1940)
- Finland (1926)
- Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Yugoslavia and
- Austria (1938)
- Luxembourg (1941)
- Italy (1939)
- Hungary (1941/1942)
ROTARY INDIA
The Rotary Club of Calcutta became the first Rotary club chartered in India on 1 January 1920. Today, more than 3,000 clubs operate throughout the country, including the Rotary Club of Vapi, home to 2011-12 RI President Kalyan Banerjee.
R.J. Coombes is credited with starting India’s first club. But Canadian James Wheeler Davidson is largely responsible for Rotary’s growth in the country.
As a member of the Rotary International committee that explored extending the organization into other countries, Davidson departed in August 1928 to help establish clubs in Asia and the Middle East. His trip turned into a two-and-a-half-year odyssey that resulted in the chartering of 23 clubs in 12 countries.
Only two clubs held charters in India at the outset of Davidson’s journey: Calcutta and Lahore (in present-day Pakistan). The clubs were more than 1,000 miles and a 40-hour train ride apart, Davidson noted in reports back to RI.
Arriving in Bombay in February 1929 with his wife and daughter, he was intent to start a club there.
“It was not an easy task to organize a club in this big city of 1,200,000,” he mused. Three attempts had failed prior to his arrival. But in March of that year, Davidson successfully formed a club in Bombay that would receive its charter on 8 May.
He organized a club in Delhi next, before visiting Rotarians in Calcutta, where Nitish C. Laharry was serving as club secretary. Laharry would become the first RI president from India in 1962-63.
On to Madras:
On 23 April, Davidson boarded a train in Calcutta for a 1,032-mile trip to Madras. He had been advised to travel by sea to avoid the excessive heat common at that time of year, but opted to go by rail to see the countryside.
“It was a real delight to watch the change as we passed from north to south, from the temperate zone into the tropics,” he later wrote. “Not only did the vegetation change, but the buildings altered some and the people appeared to take on a different appearance, the tendency to dress in white at Calcutta changed to red as we worked south.”
Two days later, Davidson convened a committee in Madras, which organized a club on 10 May. (It received its charter on 19 July).
“With the organizing of the Madras club, my plans as originally formulated, have been carried out,” Davidson noted. “We now have a club in each one of the main geographical divisions in India and further extension work should now be carried out by local Rotarians. I consider that the five clubs that now exist firmly establishes Rotary in India.”
Today, Rotary has grown to include more than 115,000 Indian Rotarians. In addition to Banerjee and Laharry, many Rotary leaders have called the country home, including 1991-92 RI President Rajendra K. Saboo and more than 10 RI directors.
Rotary Prayer
We pray almighty god
that you bless this assembly
with good acquintance and fellowship
Guide each one us
to dignify our occupation
as an opportunity to serve society
Help us to prove useful
to the community and country in which we live
and advance national and international understanding, goodwill and place
through the rotary ideal service above self.
The Four Way Test
The Four-Way Test of the things we think, say or do
- Is it the TRUTH?
- Is it FAIR to all concerned?
- Will it build GOODWILL & BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?
- Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?
Our Members 2016 - 2017
| Name | Designation | Total Projects | Total Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rtn. MPHF. P. K. Shanmugam | Charter President | 20 | 4 |
| Rtn. PHF. T. Kumara Senthil Raja | Charter Secretary | ||
| Rtn. PHF. T. Chandran | Charter Tresurer |
Our Members 2017 - 2018
| Name | Designation | Total Projects | Total Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rtn. MPHF. P. K. Shanmugam | President | 32 | 8 |
| Rtn. PHF. T. Kumara Senthil Raja | Secretary | ||
| Rtn. PHF. T. Chandran | Tresurer |
Our Members 2018 - 2019
| Name | Designation | Total Projects | Total Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rtn. PHF. N. Swaminathan | President | 45 | 10 |
| Rtn. Er. Subramani | Secretary | ||
| Rtn. L. Thiyagarajan | Treasurer |
Our Members 2019 - 2020
| Name | Designation | Total Projects | Total Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rtn. PHF. M. Vellingiri | President | 54 | 11 |
| Rtn. C. Prakash | Secretary | ||
| Rtn. S. Sevanthinathan | Treasurer |
Our Members 2020 - 2021
| Name | Designation | Total Projects | Total Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rtn. PHF. Er. T. Kumara Senthil Raja | President | 80 | 19 |
| Rtn. Y. Mohamed Ibrahim | Secretary | ||
| Rtn. Er. P. Sri Jayanthan | Treasurer |
Our Members 2021 - 2022
| Name | Designation | Total Projects | Total Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rtn. Adv. S. Damodarasamy | President | 70 | 14 |
| Rtn. Er. Velusamy | Secretary | ||
| Rtn. LIC. V. Saravanan | Treasurer |
Our Members 2022 - 2023
| Name | Designation | Total Projects | Total Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rtn. PHF. R. Sivakumar | President | ||
| Rtn. R. Manikumar | Secretary | ||
| Rtn. G. Mohanasundaram | Treasurer |
Our Members 2022 - 2023
| Name | Designation | Projects | Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rtn. PHF. S. Hemalatha | President | ||
| Rtn. PHF. S. Nirmala devi | Secretary | ||
| Rtn. M. Sharmila | Treasurer |
