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Rotary Club Neustadt an der Aisch |
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Distrikt 1950 | ||
Ziel -Vier Fragen - Losung |
Auf dieser Seite erreichen Sie die folgenden Themen:
- Das Ziel von Rotary
- Vier Fragen über Dinge, die wir denken, sagen oder tun
- Losung 1998/1999 des Präsidenten R.I. James L. Lacy
- Losung 1997/1998 des Präsidenten R.I. Glen W. Kinross
- Losung 1996/1997 des Präsidenten R.I. Luis Vicente Giay
Verwandte Themen auf anderen Seiten:
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Das Ziel von Rotary
Das Ziel von Rotary ist die Dienstbereitschaft im täglichen Leben. Rotary sucht diesem Ziel auf folgendem Wege näher zu kommen.
- Durch Pflege der Freundschaft als einer Gelegenheit, sich anderen nützlich zu erweisen.
- Durch Anerkennung hoher ethischer Grundsätze im Privat- und Berufsleben sowie des Wertes jeder für die Allgemeinheit nützlich Tätigkeit.
- Durch Förderung verantwortungsbewußter privater, geschäftlicher und öffentlicher Betätigung aller Rotarier
- Durch Pflege des guten Willens zur Verständigung und zum Frieden unter den Völkern durch eine Weltgemeinschaft berufstätiger Personen, geeint im Ideal des Dienens
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Vier Fragen über Dinge, die wir denken, sagen oder tun
- Ist es wahr, bin ich aufrichtig?
- Ist es fair für alle Beteiligten?
- Wird es Freundschaft und guten Willen fördern?
- Wird es dem Wohl aller Beteiligten dienen?
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Losung des Präsidenten 1998/1999 James L. Lacy von Rotary International für das Jahr 1998 / 1999
1998-99 President James L. Lacy and this year's RI Theme Losung des Präsidenten 1997/1998 Glen W. Kinross von Rotary International für das Jahr 1997 / 1998
Show Rotary Cares RI Theme 1997-98 - Show Rotary Cares (From The Rotarian,Vol. 1 No. 171, July 1997) by Glen Kinross
Dear Fellow Rotarians,
Everyone wants to live in a world in which the aged, the infirm, and the children are well cared for -- a world at peace, free of war, crime, and violence, and where each person has the opportunity for education and employment. Rotarians by their very nature care deeply about the problems that obstruct the creation of such a world. And with leaders in every business and profession in 28,000 communities worldwide, we have the potential to turn our concern into action and the resources needed to improve the lot and lives of people everywhere.
Rotary's greatest strength will always be the individual Rotarian. No other organization has such powerful human resources. The time has come to fully employ those resources and put them to work solving the most serious problems in our communities. I believe that if all of our 1.2 million individual Rotarians show they care by improving the quality of life in each of their 28,000 communities, we can indeed create a better world.
Let us begin by attacking hunger and poverty, which are the root causes of so many other ills in our communities. But we cannot lift people out of poverty with food and shelter alone. People also need the tools to help themselves and to improve their situation in life. We live in a world of letters and numbers. Those who cannot read, write, and do basic mathematics will never be able to pull themselves out of poverty and live in dignity and self-sufficiency.
To accomplish such lofty goals, we must not choose projects because they are easy but because they are hard. We can begin by identifying the most serious problems in our own communities. Then, drawing on the business and professional skills of our members, we can develop practical solutions and convince other community leaders to help implement them.
As Rotarians, we command considerable influence, but many clubs are not making full use of their stature and power for good. To fight the rising levels of crime, poverty, homelessness, and other ills, Rotary should become the conscience of the community and bring pressure to bear upon others to join our vital cause. Using the Object of Rotary as our guiding principle, let us begin at the grassroots level to Show Rotary Cares.
Show Rotary Cares Through All Avenues of Service
When you join Rotary, you accept a total package of Club Service, Vocational Service, Community Service, and International Service. Each of these four avenues has its own unique purpose and reason for being reflected in the Object of Rotary. The complete Rotarian does not concentrate on only one or two programs or projects, but treads a well-worn path on all four Avenues of Service.
Care for Your Club
Help your club grow by using Rotary's unique classification system as the framework for membership development. Attract new members by developing the kind of meaningful service projects that offer qualified men and women a reason to join Rotary. Give all your members an opportunity to use the leadership skills and experience that qualified them to become Rotarians in the first place. Create an ambience of fellowship and friendship that will contribute to effective service.
Care for Your Vocation
Restore Vocational Service to its original stature by assuming leadership roles in your professional or trade associations and sharing Rotary's ideals and high ethical standards with your professional colleagues. Address practical workplace issues, such as labor negotiations, using your considerable influence as business and professional leaders to effect viable solutions.
Care for Your Community
Make Community Service the hallmark of Rotary by developing meaningful projects that clearly identify your club as a leader in the community. Tackle the most difficult community problems_hunger, poverty, illiteracy, child abuse, and street crime. Rather than simply raising funds for other organizations, put Rotary's stamp on your projects and involve members in all stages of planning and implementation.
Care for Our World
Expand your efforts beyond national borders to help achieve better communities in other parts of the world. Support World Community Service projects that combat poverty and hunger_the number-one obstacles to world peace_and promote literacy for all. Participate in The Rotary Foundation programs as a way of further extending Rotary's human highway to peace. Support your Foundation through gifts to the Annual Fund and the Permanent Fund, so that these programs can continue to relieve human suffering and foster international understanding. Object of Rotary
The Object of Rotary is to encourage and foster the ideal of service as a basis of worthy enterprise and, in particular, to encourage and foster:
First: The development of acquaintance as an opportunity for service;
Second: 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;
Third: The application of the ideal of service in each Rotarian's personal, business, and community life;
Fourth: The advancement of international understanding, goodwill, and peace through a world fellowship of business and professional persons united in the ideal of service.Losung des Präsidenten 1996/1997 Luis Vicente Giay von Rotary International für das Jahr 1996 / 1997
- Mit Tatkraft und Weitblick die Zukunft gestalten
- Build the future with action and vision
- Construyamos el futuro con acción y visión
- Action et vision pour bátir l'avenir
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