Rotary International is an organization whose members comprise Rotary Clubs (service clubs) located all over the world (about 30 000 clubs in more than 160 countries). The members of Rotary Clubs are known as Rotarians and are business and professional leaders who provide humanitarian service, encourage high ethical standards in all vocations, and help build goodwill and peace in the world.
Their most-known motto is "Service above Self." Another motto is "They profit most who serve best".Modified by the 2004 "RI Council on Legislation", from the original "He profits most who serves the best" - see Rotary International manual, Part 5 (Rotary Marks), online at * accessed 2 June 2006
The resolution to remove gender specific terminology from secondary motto was taken by Rotary International Council of Legislation in 2004.
The world's first service club, the first Rotary Club was founded in 1905 in Chicago by attorney Paul P. Harris and three other businessmen. The National Association of Rotary Clubs was formed in 1910. That same year, Rotary chartered a branch in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; marking the first establishment of an American-style service club outside the United StatesWikle, Thomas A. "International Expansion of the American-Style Service Club", Journal of American Culture Summer 1999, Vol. 22, Issue 2, p45. This was followed in 1911 by the founding of the first outside North America; in Dublin, Ireland. Other early international branches were Cuba in 1919 and India in 1920. The name was changed to Rotary International in 1922 because branches had been formed in six continentsWikle, 1999 p. 47.. It had by 1999 spread to 188 countries and has more than 1.2 million members in over 32,000 clubs; this made it the most widespread by branches and second largest service club by membership, behind Kiwanis. The name Rotary was chosen since meetings were originally rotated to different locales of members of the organization. Members of a specific club meet weekly for breakfast, lunch or dinner, which is a social event as well as a time to organize work on their service goals.
After years of debate, women were admitted in 1989, and now make up a little under 12% of the membership. Previously, women were able to join a linked organization for the wives and daughters of Rotarians, the Inner Wheel. Many Inner Wheel groups still exist.
Other Rotary sponsored organizations include: Rotaract - a service club for young men and women ages 18 to 30 with around 185,000 members in 8,000 clubs in 155 countries; Interact - a service club consisting of more than 239,000 young people ages 14-18 with over 10,400 clubs in 108 countries; and Rotary Community Corps (RCC) - a volunteer organization with an estimated 103,000 non-Rotarian men and women in over 4,400 communities in 68 countries.
Active Membership is by invitation from a current Rotarian, to professionals working in diverse areas of endeavour. Each club can have up to ten per cent of its membership representing each business or profession in the area it serves. The goal of the clubs is to promote service to the community they work in, as well as to the wider world. Many projects are organized for the local community by a single club, but some are organized globally.
Honorary membership is given by election of a Rotary Club to people who have distinguished themselves by meritorious service in the furtherance of Rotary ideals. Honorary membership is conferred only in exceptional cases. Honorary members are exempt from the payment of admission fees and dues. They have no voting privileges and are not eligible to hold any office in their club. Honorary membership is time limited and terminates automatically at the end of the term, usually one year. It may be extended for an additional period or may also be revoked at any time.
From 1905 until the 1980s, women were not allowed membership in Rotary clubs, although Rotarian spouses, including Paul Harris's wife, were often members of the similar "Inner Wheel" club. This was primarily because a membership prerequisite was a business management position, and women were excluded from the labor force. Women did play some roles, and Paul Harris' wife made numerous speeches. In 1963, it was noted that the Rotary practice of involving wives in club activities helped to break down female seclusion in some countriesBird, John "The Wonderful, Wide, Backslapping World Of Rotary." Saturday Evening Post 2/9/1963, Vol. 236 Issue 5, p58-62 . Of note, clubs such as Rotary had long been predated by women's voluntary organizations, which started in the United States as early as 1790Wikle 1999, p 50..
Gender equity in Rotary International was first publicly raised by the Duarte RI club affair, although clubs had been debating female membership since the late 1970sde Pommereau, Isabelle. "Women Fill Top Spots In Rotary Club 10 Years After Being Admitted." Christian Science Monitor 6/3/1997, Vol. 89, Issue 131. In 1976-1978, the California Rotary Duarte club allowed three women to join. Official Rotary International representatives expressed alarm at the presence of women in the Duarte club. Requests by Rotary International to terminate the women's memberships were rejected by the club, and as a result Rotary International revoked the club's charter in 1978. The Duarte club filed suit in the California courts, claiming that Rotary Clubs are business establishments subject to regulation under California's Unruh Civil Rights Act, which bans discrimination based on race, gender, religion or ethnic origin. Rotary International then appealed the decision to the U. S. Supreme Court. The RI attorney argued that "…decision threatens to force us to take in everyone, like a motel". The Duarte Club was not alone in opposing RI leadership; the Seattle-International District club had unanimously voted to admit women in 1986.Rotary International California District website accessed 17 June 2006 The United States Supreme Court, on May 4, 1987, confirmed the Californian decision at the unanimity of its members. Since that time, women have been allowed to join Rotary. "ABCs of Rotary" website [http://www.rotaryeclubone.org/abc_1.htm#Women%20in%20Rotary accessed 17 June 2006 But the Duarte club's move was only an early step towards the inevitable in a climate of falling service club membership: the Elks, final holdout among service clubs in prohibitting female membership, voted in 1995 to allow womenFost, Dan. "Farewell to the Lodge." American Demographics January 1996, Vol. 18, Issue 1. p40-46 . By 1997, there where 12 female district governors and 1500 female club presidents in the United States, and they accounted for 13% of membership, with new female memberships outstripping new male memberships by a factor of ten to one. This still remains well below the corporate level of female representation, which stood in 1997 at 40% de Pommereau 1997
The change of the second Rotarian motto in 2004, from "He profits most who serves best" to "They profit most who serve best", 99 years after its foundation illustrates the move to general acceptance of women members in the famous philanthropic club.
The objectives of Rotary are to encourage and foster the ideal of service as a basis of worthy enterprise and, in particular, to encourage and foster:
These objectives are further set against the "Rotarian Four-Way test", used to see if a planned action is compatible with the Rotarian spirit. The test, developed by Rotarian and entrepreneur Herbert J. Taylor during the Great Depression as a set of guidelines for restoring faltering businesses was adopted as the standard of ethics by Rotary in 1942 and is still seen as a standard for ethics in business managementRussell, Jeff. "Can You Survive Rotary's Four-Way Test?" Journal of Management in Engineering, May/Jun2000, Vol. 16 Issue 3, p13:
There has been some limited criticism concerning the Rotary International program for polio eradication, which is supported with the help of World Health Organization. There are some reservations regarding the adaptation capabilities of the virus and some of the oral vaccines, which have been reported to cause infection resurgences Vaccine Alliance website December 2002 report. As stated by Vaccine Alliance, however, in spite of the limited risk of polio vaccination, it would be neither prudent or practicable to cease the vaccination program until there is strong evidence the "all wild poliovirus transmission been stopped". In a recent speech at the Rotary International Convention, held at the Bella Center in Copanhagen, Bruce Cohick stated that polio in all its known wild forms will be eliminated by late 2008, provided efforts in Nigeria, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India all proceed with their current momentum.Rotary International Polio Facts 2006 Accessed 15 July 2006. This document appears to be updated quarterly.
As the Nazis saw international organisations as suspect, the Nazi Party declared membership to both Rotary and the Nazi Party as incompatible. After four years of negotiations between the central headquarters in Chicago and the Nazi Party - indicative of Rotary efforts to oppose Nazi ideologies - clubs were closed and Charters withdrawn in 1938. Some clubs maintained an activity as "Friday Clubs". Rotary began re-chartering clubs after World War II ended.http://www.rotaryfirst100.org/global/conflict/munich/index.htm
Paul Harris, Rotary's founder, was in Germany in 1932 as part of a European tour. While there, he planted a "tree of friendship" at an airport in Berlin, the first of several such plantings in Europe that year. This original tree was commemorated with a plaque (though it was later removed due to the Nazis' opposition to Rotary). The tree, destroyed in World War II, would be replaced in 1985 along with the original plaque.http://www.rotaryfirst100.org/library/trees/europe/index.htm
See Rotary history for more. For an extensive list of famous Rotary Club members, see Category:Rotary Club members
Rotary International | Fraternal and service organizations | 1905 establishments
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