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Peace Corps

  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Acting Director Carol Spahn meets with Partnering for Peace Executive Committee see more

    CAROL SPAHN, ACTING PEACE CORPS DIRECTOR, SUPPORTS PARTNERING FOR PEACE: FRIENDS OF PEACE CORPS AND ROTARY INTERNATIONAL

     

    Carol Spahn, Acting Director of the U.S. Peace Corps, recently met with the executive committee of Partnering for Peace (PFP): Friends of Peace Corps and Rotary International.  Spahn addressed the current Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the two organizations, and discussed additional ways PFP and Rotary can continue its support of the Peace Corps and of Peace Corps Volunteers (PCVs) abroad, as they begin to return to the field.

    Kim Dixon, president of PFP stated, "Carol was very open to the opportunities that the Rotary/Peace Corps partnership can offer; from local integration of staff, support of PCVs in the field, projects supported by Returned PCVs, and opportunities for PCVs to collaborate with Rotary in their primary or secondary projects, it all adds up to a win-win for Peace Corps."

    Peace Corps/Rotary Week is being planned for later this year. Steve Werner, founding and immediate past president of PFP, provided an overview of the plan with examples of how the week will galvanize attention of the joint goals and projects of Peace Corps and Rotary in the field to a continuation of service by RPCVs as members or friends of Rotary clubs back home. Rotarians are also good candidates for Peace Corps assignments, and the week-long event will allow Rotarians to learn more about what PCVs do and how they can work together.

    Rotary International currently boasts over 1.2 million members and 35,000 Rotary clubs worldwide. Joint projects between the two organizations have been documented to the tune of over $700,000 USD, and the Partnership continues to collect stories of additional projects. The missions of Rotary and PC are almost identical, and examples of collaboration include support of English libraries; healthcare; education; to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) projects. The relationship between Rotarians and Peace Corps is mutually beneficial, and local communities reap the rewards.

    There are numerous ways for PCVs and Rotary to further the partnership in the field, and back home, which PFP can help identify. Kim shared her own recent Peace Corps experience of gaining support from a Tbilisi, Georgia Rotary club that helped with transportation, and printing of health pamphlets for the ethnic minority in her region. PCVs responded by helping with Rotary’s rural health fair. Another example of recent partnership is a Give-a-Book program in Costa Rica and several other countries, where PCVs identified the needs and Rotarians helped collect, ship, catalog, and set up libraries in PCVs schools. These are just a few of many examples that highlight the collaboration between the two organizations. Upon completion of service, PCVs can continue their partnership with Rotary upon return to the US.

    PFP is hoping to find current Rotarians in the RPCV ranks. Please let us know by signing in and gaining more information at  www.partneringforpeace.com,  

     

     April 09, 2021
  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Peace Corps – a 2-year commitment, a lifetime of service see more

    Hold onto your hats folks, because Richard Pyle has a fantastic joint project to share with us! Through the cooperation of the Rotary Clubs of Negril and Lucea in Jamaica, and the Rotary Club of Washington, D.C., they were able to deliver conflict resolution skills to over 200 participants in a two-day workshop. The project targeted senior and emerging leaders of various civic groups in western Jamaica, an area suffering from a lot of violence.

    Richard Pyle was a Peace Corps volunteer in Jamaica from 1966 – 1968 and the relationship with Jamaica became generational when his daughter Kim continued one of his many projects there.

    As a PCV, Pyle worked as a school counselor and helped establish the school guidance program in Lucea,. His neighbor in Lucea was Arthur Wint (1st Jamaican to win an Olympic gold medal) and together they established a chamber of commerce which evolved into the Rotary Club of Lucea, chartered in 1974. Wint, a physician, was the only resident doctor in the parish of Hanover, in which Lucea is located.

    But that was just the beginning of his relationship with Jamaica. Pyle joined the faculty of Alma College in Alma Michigan in the late 1970s and began organizing 3-week service projects with students from Alma to Jamaica. After leaving Alma for the University of Texas in Austin in 1983, he started student service projects with the University in Austin in 1988. The teachers in Jamaica asked for student aids to help in classrooms with 80 to 100 students in a single classroom. When Pyle left the University of Texas in 1990, the program ended to restart in Hollins University in Roanoke, Virginia where Pyle's daughter Kim was a student. Pyle shared the idea of a service project in Jamaica with the Dean of Students and together they implemented it with Kim as one of the participants. The University liked it and have gone every year in coordination with the Lucea, Jamaica Rotary. Pyle observed that a “lot of teachers have been understaffed. These service projects helped students learn to swim and have recreational and arts and crafts projects which would coordinate with independent studies.”

    Unfortunately, Jamaica, in recent times, is having its share of crime, violence and domestic abuses. In an effort to begin to combat this growing problem, the Rotary Club of Washington, DC along with the Rotary Clubs of Negril and Lucea came together to offer solution to the growing problem. Under the Theme: “Bringing Back The Peace”, over 100 students, youths and community leaders were in attendance at the Conference. The Objective of the Initiative was to create knowledge and awareness of strategies and resources for resolving Conflict.

    “The Rotary Clubs of Negril and Lucea, Jamaica contacted me since I had served in western Jamaica as a PCV and have a long history of projects with their clubs and Rotary Clubs in Austin and D.C.” The focus was on delivering conflict resolution skills to key members/stakeholders. Both senior and emerging leaders of a variety of civic groups participated.

    The project received rave reviews from over100 participants who reported feeling better prepared to meet violence issues. The atmosphere of collaboration was very positive and had a significant impact on building peacekeeping and conflict resolution skills. If you're thinking about replicating this project in your club or country, be sure to reach out to Richard for all the juicy details!

     November 05, 2023
  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    CELEBRATE THE THIRD ANNUAL ROTARY-PEACE CORPS WEEK SEPTEMBER 18-22, 2023! see more

    Join fellow members of Partnering for Peace, Rotary Club members, RPCV’s and others September 18-22 for the third annual Rotary-Peace Corps Week to celebrate our connections, accomplishments and hopes.  The event is an exciting time to get together virtually in a series of a 60 to 90 minute panel discussion each day highlighting the goals, activities and projects of our unique organization and its role as a service support organization for the formal Rotary International-Peace Corps of the United States collaboration. Click here for the full list of events. Be sure to register for each individual event to receive the Zoom links. Be prepared to Zoom in and participate!

    Your planning committee has worked on the RPCW for months to bring you a series of informative, fun and stimulating sessions that will deepen your commitment to world peace and whet your appetite for being involved in projects that enhance your Rotary and Peace Corps experiences.

    The five sessions start at different times each day so if you are unable to make one live session, you can make another! If you miss any of the sessions, they will be recorded and available on the PFP website at partneringforpeace.org.

    Here is the lineup for each of the days:

     

    Monday, September 18, 5:30 p.m. EDT

    Keynote Panel: Peace Through Service, Action and Diversity, featuring Jody Olsen, former Peace Corps Director, and Pat Merryweather-Argis, RI Vice President

    REGISTER HERE

     

    Tuesday, September 19, 8:00 p.m. EDT

    How to Make the Rotary-Peace Corps Connection Work.  Learn how Rotary Clubs, RPCVs and current Peace Corps members work together, featuring PFP members Alan Kusonoki, Ellen Young and Charlie Hunt.

    REGISTER HERE

     

    Wednesday, September 20, 9:00 a.m. EDT

    Connecting In-Country Rotary Clubs and Peace Corps Posts. Examples of how Rotary Clubs can add benefit and help support Peace Corps and  Rotary projects in countries where PCVs from the Club’s or District’s home base are actively serving. 

    REGISTER HERE

     

    Thursday, September 21, 2:00 p.m. EDT

    Successful Examples of Joint Rotary-Peace Corps Projects, featuring Rotarian-RPCVs:

    • Bob Roberts, RPCV Peru

    • Natasha Wanchek, RPCV Ukraine

    • Steve Werner, RPCV  S.Korea and Georgia

    REGISTER HERE

     

    Friday, September 22, 2:00 p.m. EDT

    Rotary + Peace Corps: A Global Force for Peace. Group discussion focusing on Rotary Action Group for Peace, Rotary Peace Builder Clubs, including joint projects and peacebuilding activities. Kim Dixon, President of PFP will host along with Featured guests:

    • Al Jubitz, Co-Founder Rotary Action Group for Peace

    • Erin Thomas, RPCV, Peace Fellow, Co-Founder Rotary Action Group for Peace

    • Barbara Muller, Rotary e-club of World Peace

    • Mike Caruso, RPCV, Founder, Rotary Peacebuilder Clubs

    REGISTER HERE

    So there you have it! This event promises to be chock full of information and ideas for you to parlay into action to build the Rotary-Peace Corps partnership through Partnering for Peace. Be sure to attend as many sessions as you can so that you can build your personal and your organizations’ goals of fostering peace and strengthening the lives of individuals throughout the world! Once again, sign up HERE to make sure you are registered for a front-row seat!

     August 13, 2023
  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Join NPCA for the 2023 Peace Corps Connect Conference see more

    Discover the power of service at Peace Corps Connect 2023 on Friday, September 8 at 8 p.m. Eastern and Saturday, September 9 at 2 p.m. Eastern. Drawing inspiration from JFK and Sargent Shriver's call to serve,the theme "Answer the Call: Serve, Serve, Serve" aims to reignite the spirit of service that once defined our nation and communities abroad. We'll explore how storytelling can reshape the narrative of national and global service and inspire more individuals to serve. Amid declining interest in service among younger generations, the need for Americans to serve is crucial. Register today

     August 13, 2023
  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Pioneering Peace and Collaboration: Diyar Talal's Pathbreaking Fellowship with Rotary Club of Housto see more


    With the dawn of a new era of partnership, Diyar Talal's pioneering fellowship with the Rotary Club of Houston Skyline sets the stage for a world united by shared values and collaboration. As the first-ever U.S. Department of State Community Solutions Program (CSP) Fellow placed with a Rotary Club, Diyar is trailblazing a new era of cooperation between these two impactful organizations. This collaboration not only introduces fresh perspectives to Rotary Clubs but also amplifies the reach and impact of the CSP. The aim is simple yet profound: to encourage Rotary Clubs and Rotary Action Groups to host CSP Fellows, fostering a dynamic exchange of ideas, skills, and visions.

     

    Diyar's journey exemplifies the transformative power of international professional development exchanges. Hailing from Iraq, Diyar is a beacon of hope and change in his community. As a CSP Fellow, he is tasked with an array of responsibilities, including contributing to the social media and marketing efforts of Partnering for Peace and Rotary-Peace Corps Week 2023. This role allows him to combine his passion for peacebuilding with his knack for strategic communication.

     

    The Community Solutions Program, sponsored by the U.S. Department of State and implemented by IREX, aims to empower community leaders worldwide to tackle complex challenges in their communities and become agents of positive change. Diyar is a prime example of such leadership. His work in environmental issues, peace and conflict resolution, and civic engagement has earned him the opportunity to expand his impact on a global stage.

     

    At the Rotary Club of Houston Skyline, Diyar's tasks are diverse and impactful. His involvement includes participating in and supporting intercultural dialogue events, furthering his understanding of activity implementation in an American context. Diyar is also set to deliver persuasive presentations on subjects ranging from global citizenship to peacebuilding. Through these presentations, he aims to captivate audiences and convey critical messages that transcend borders.

     

    Another key facet of Diyar's role is his engagement in community service projects. By actively participating in such projects, he gains valuable insights into the local context, challenges, and opportunities within Houston's diverse community. This experience not only enhances Diyar's personal and professional growth but also serves as a bridge between cultures, connecting the dots between different communities and their shared goals.

     

    Diyar's journey doesn't end with his CSP fellowship. Upon his return to Iraq, he plans to use his newfound knowledge and skills to enhance his Iraqi Travellers Cafe and "Conversation Beyond Borders"  initiative. This initiative, aimed at promoting peace through intercultural dialogue, is set to expand its impact within Iraq and internationally. The story of Diyar's journey, from a CSP Fellow in Houston to a catalyst for change in Iraq, exemplifies the power of collaboration, learning, and shared values in fostering a more harmonious world.

     

    The partnership between CSP and Rotary is a beacon of hope and a testament to the potential of international collaboration. Through pioneers like Diyar Talal, who bridge cultures, break barriers, and inspire change, we witness the true essence of diplomacy and global citizenship. As Diyar's journey continues to unfold, we can only imagine the ripple effect his efforts will have on communities and individuals around the world, reminding us all that, together, we can build a more peaceful and connected planet.

     

     

     August 14, 2023
  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Partnering for Peace at the Rotary International Convention in Australia see more

    Partnering for Peace (PFP)  was pleased to participate in the Rotary International Convention this year, with a booth and speaking opportunities.  Having a staffed PFP booth in the House of Friendship (HOF) Peace Park was big positive for the partnership. This was the first year that a Peace Park was included in the HOF and PFP was specifically invited by the Peace Rotary Action Group (Peace RAG)  to have a free booth next to the Peace Park. The Peace Park had a stage and various peace organizations including PFP were asked to have a booth all around the Peace Park. PFP’s booth was one of the best booths because we faced the Peace Park stage and we were close enough that we could hear everything and we had a lot of visibility and traffic at our booth. We raised awareness of and interest in the partnership, of Peace Corps and of the many current and potential benefits to Rotary at the International, District and Club levels. The other Rotary Peace organizations, such as the Institute for Economics and Peace, the Peace Fellows, the Peace Rotary Action Group, the Rotary Action Group to Combat Human Slavery, and many others, would like to partner with PFP and have PFP members helping them with their programs and projects.

    We grew the PFP community by adding to the email list and added many personal connections. PFP would like to thank current PFP board members Cal Mann, Steve Werner, and Erica Brouillette and former PFP board member Bill Stumbaugh for helping with setting up the booth, staffing the booth, and speaking at a Special Briefing that took place on the Monday afternoon of the Convention. In addition to increasing awareness of the partnership between Rotary and Peace Corps among Americans attending the Melbourne Convention, there is a good possibility that Australian and Canadian Rotary clubs will develop a similar partnership with their country’s version of Peace Corps. And several Rotarians from Peace Corps countries came by to say how much meeting or being taught by a Peace Corps volunteer meant to them.

    The Special Briefing with Steve, Cal, Bill and Erica was better attended than planned. Extra chairs had to be brought in and the enthusiasm and questions indicated a strong interest in the partnership. Many new Rotarian RPCVs attended and joined PFP. And a few District Governor Elects asked for someone from PFP to speak at next year’s District Conference. After the special briefing PFP had a Happy Hour that was also well attended and increased the fellowship we share together.

    A few more details:

    · Dozens of PC community members visited the booth: RPCV Rotarians, former PC host country staff, host country Rotarians who’d been counterparts to PCVs, family and friends of PC Volunteers (prospective, current and past),  Rotaractors, Interactors, and Peace Fellows, fans, supporters, past-applicants who didn’t go, etc. 

    · US Rotary clubs can immediately begin building relationships with their local PC community members, such as the local PC Recruiter who might be able to connect them with PC Invitees or Applicants, local RPCV groups (find them at peacecorpsconnect.org/Affiliate Groups) 

    · Many PC host country Rotarians have fond memories of the PCV(s) in their community. They are interested in connecting with PC in their country again. (We informed them of how we can help them connect with the PC office in their country (Go to PeaceCorps.gov and you can get the contact by country.)

    · US Interactors have low awareness of PC but once they understand what it is, they have a high level of interest. Speaking to their clubs should be high on our priority list and also then speaking to the Rotary club that is the Interact Club’s sponsor.  

    Finally, we had several Rotary leaders stop by the booth and express their support for the partnership, John and Marga Hewko, Stephanie Urchick (Rotary International President Nominee), Peter Kyle, immediate past RI board member, Al Jubitz, founder of the Peace Rotary Action Group, Fergal McCarthy, TRF Program Manager for the Peace and Conflict Area of Focus. We hope more PFP members will attend next year’s Convention in Singapore where we hope to have a booth if we find members to help staff it.

  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Save the Date! Rotary - Peace Corps Week see more

    From Monday, September 18th through Friday, September 22nd, Partnering for Peace (PFP), with Rotary International and Peace Corps, will host its third annual collaborative, week-long event to celebrate the opportunities and successes of the formal Rotary/Peace Corps partnership.  

    The Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), first signed in 2014 between Rotary International and the U.S. Peace Corps, is aimed at providing Rotary connections and support to Peace Corps Volunteers in the field and the US and connect Returned Peace Corps Volunteers and clubs with Rotary and Rotaract Clubs upon completion of service.  

    Rotary – Peace Corps Week’s goal is to foster wider awareness of the MOU, and this year’s event is designed to build on that success with the theme “Celebrating our Connections".  Through daily Webinars/zoom calls, we will discuss:

    • How our PC and Rotary leaders view the Partnership opportunities

    • How Rotary Districts are working with the PC Community, 

    • How Peace Corps country staffs and volunteers are working with Rotary.

    • Sharing Indepth Joint Project examples that you can replicate

    • Celebrating the cause related groups in PC and Rotary (Climate, Refugees and Peace)

    You’re invited to participate in Rotary-Peace Corps Partnership, during the week and throughout the year:

    • Invite a speaker.  

    • Rotary District newsletters 

    • Local media 

    • RPCV affiliate group newsletters 

    • Attend sessions and activities during the week-long event.  Registration coming soon

    For more information about this event, and more ideas of how to participate, please visit our website or contact events@partneringforpeace.org.  

  • Vana Prewitt posted an article

    Explains the formal partnership agreement between Rotary and Peace Corps with examples of how these two great organizations are using their combined assets to make a more peaceful world.

     August 28, 2021
  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    An Peace Corps - Rotary Project from 1962 see more

    On June 5th Rotarians Vana Prewitt and Kelsey Mitchell presented to the Gulf Coast Florida RPCV Organization on what Rotary is and how Rotary can work with Returned Peace Corps Organizations at the grassroots level.  Prewitt also has served as a Peace Corps Volunteer twice.   This was sent to them by one of their members, in response to the presentation.  

    Almost six decades past I was a PCV stationed in San Pedro de Macorís, a port city on the southeast coast of the Dominican Republic and the site of the nation's oldest Rotary Club. Rotarians were quite helpful to me in achieving the construction of 5 multi-purpose basket/volley ball courts around town. In fact, one of their members, a prominent lawyer, helped me to establish a non-profit entity to collect funds for the project. Such was the importance of Rotary assistance to my efforts that our country director came to a special meeting of the club to explain the purpose of the Peace Corps in general and to describe the work of volunteers nationwide.

    Teaming with local organizations like Rotary is an excellent way for PCVs to become known among influential leaders in their communities who could provide material help as well as influence with local authorities in pursuit of their projects and activities -- not to mention substantially furthering the second goal of the Peace Corps Act.

    Fred Kalhammer

    DR#5, 1962/64

  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Have a Peace Corps Recruiter present to your Rotary Club see more

    It has been my pleasure to be part of the Rotary International – Peace Corps partnership for the last three years as the Outreach Chair for Partnering for Peace: Friends of Peace Corps and Rotary.  As the partnership grows and increases in scope, our outreach committee is currently focused on connecting local Peace Corps Recruiters with local Rotary Club programming chairs through our database of Returned Peace Corps Volunteers Rotarians and district leaders who fully understand the opportunity of working with the Peace Corps community.  The outreach committee, under the lead of Reggie O’Brien, has made introductions between Peace Corps Recruiters and 80 Rotary Districts around the country who are in our database.  The purpose of the introductions is for Peace Corps Recruiters to do presentations in as many Rotary clubs across the U.S. on what it is like to be a Peace Corps Volunteer and that it is never too late to be a Peace Corps Volunteer.

     

    I can attest to that as I was sworn in as a Peace Corps Volunteer when I was 55 years old.  The inspiration came when I happened upon the Peace Corps website and the home page celebrated a volunteer who was celebrating his 80th birthday during service.  As Rotarians, this is a great way to fulfill “service above self”.  Personally the experience changed my life as a Rotarian serving overseas and I would suggest to everyone that Returned Peace Corps Volunteers are idea candidates to become Rotarians.  There are two opportunities to be a Peace Corps Volunteer:  the classic two year commitment and Peace Corps Response, which is a project specific volunteer opportunity that last for three to eight months.

     

    If you are interested in having a Peace Corps Recruiter do a zoom presentation to your Rotary club, feel free to contact me.  I have a list of all recruiters around the country including my local District 5450.  I would be glad to help you make that connection for your individual club.

     

    Charlie Masilae Hunt

    Outreach Chair - Partnering for Peace - NPCA Affiliate Group

    Peace Corps Rotary Alliance Committee – District 5450

    Denver LoDo Rotary Club

    RPCV Vanuatu 2006-2008

    Mobile 720.822.1413

    masilae@gmail.com

     September 02, 2020
  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Support Evacuated PCV ongoing projects. see more

    Peace Corps Volunteers (PCV) during their service occasionally have reason to  raise funds to bring their in-country project to the next level.  During service PCVs can raise funds through the Peace Corps website.  That came to a full stop when all of the volunteers were evacuated due to COVID.  Some of the evacuated PCVs had the support in place to continue those projects and were interested in continuing.  The National Peace Corps Association (NPCA) has created that opportunity at their website.  Currently there are seven project needing financial support.  The countries with active projects are Moldova, Vanuatu, Columbia, two projects in Benin  and two projects in Albania.  

    If you know of clubs or individuals who have connections to these countries, please encourage them to review the projects and consider offering financial support at the NPCA website

    As the NPCA states at the donate webpage: In establishing the Peace Corps, JFK spoke of the “great common cause...of bringing to man that decent way of life which is the foundation of freedom and a condition of peace.” Today, people continue to be confronted by war, poverty, disease and a changing climate, and now when our own country is experiencing divisiveness, intolerance, and fear—that “great common cause” is more urgent than ever.  Support for NPCA and our partnered campaigns will deepen the Peace Corps communities' global impact by empowering members and groups to champion that “great common cause.” From advocacy for a bigger and better Peace Corps to supporting sustainable international development projects, we are building a better world dollar by dollar. Join us, and be a part of our community of changemakers.

  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    The RPCV community is ready to assist other evacuees just like they helped ePCV Elyse Magen. see more

    When 7300 Peace Corps Volunteers were abruptly evacuated in March, a common first reaction was to mourn the untimely end of service.  But across the decades, Peace Corps Volunteers learn the importance of being flexible.
     

    Elyse Magen's evacuation created two economic hardships:  loss of a critical Small Projects Administration grant, end of plans for a yet unfunded loan program.

    Not one to be deterred by a 3000 mile separation or a pandemic, she reached out to the RPCV community and secured funding through Friends of Colombia and the National Peace Corps Association to replace the SPA grant.  Her successful campaign to replace the lost SPA funding is included below.  Then she worked with TCP Global to get loan funds to her site despite a quarantine and a bank that had initially sent the TCP Global funds back to the U.S. 

     

    Within two months of arrival back home Elyse and four other Colombia evacuees are working together to continue their service on a global scale. They had witnessed the positive impact of TCP Global loans on small, underserved rural communities and jumped at the chance to help TCP Global replicate its success around the world. 

    Curt Commander built a data base to facilitate expansion of the loan program.  Zack Coen designed a form to improve the ease and quality of reporting from the 30 loan sites in 11 countries. Then Zack and Curt worked with TCP Global to upload 15,000 financial transactions for the more than 3000 loans issued over the last thirteen years and to verify that all reporting needs were addressed.  

    Elyse and Josh Concannon developed training materials for TCP Global loan program mentors and Kenney Tran took responsibility for  social media outreach, starting with the story below about two programs opening in Uganda during the pandemic. 

    Calvin Yahn, who introduced TCP Global to his site in Zambia joined the mentoring contingent and YOU CAN TOO !! 

    The RPCV community is ready to assist other evacuees just like they helped Elyse.  

  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Rotarian Peace Corps Volunteers bring RYLA to Ukraine! see more

    The Genesis of RYLA in Ukraine – A Beautiful Partnership

    By RPCV Andy Lenec

     

    There is an old saying, “Man plans, God laughs.”  Well, God was not laughing the entire time that the inaugural RYLA Conference that came off this year in Ukraine was being planned, but God’s plans included lessons in humility that I had overlooked when putting together the roadmap for my vision of an international youth conference as a part of my United States Peace Corps service there.

     

    A bit of back story.  I had been a Rotarian for over 25 years before deciding to apply for the Peace Corps.  What can I say, some people retire in curious ways.  My parents had been political refugees from Ukraine and since I spoke the language and was familiar with the culture, I had high hopes of being accepted and assigned to serve in Youth Development in Ukraine.  As I said, man plans…  I was accepted and assigned to Ukraine, but as an NGO Advisor in the Community Development Division, and ultimately seconded as a volunteer to several organizations in the small city of Truskavets in western Ukraine, among them a small but enthusiastic Rotary Club! 

     

    This was by design of course, based on my prior experience and the Peace Corps’ current needs, but regardless, my passion for working with youth would not be denied.  Actually, it was a pretty easy sell.  Who can deny that helping youth – any youth, anywhere, anytime – is not a worthy investment in our future?  What began as weekly English Clubs run at the local library (one of my partner organizations) and a local ‘gymnasia’ (an advanced high school), and enthusiastically endorsed by RC Truskavets, morphed into the dream of hosting an annual International Youth Conference.

     

    This is excerpted from one of my original correspondences, floating the idea to potential participants and sponsors:

     

    “The First Annual Truskavets International Youth Conference will take place in August 4 – 11, 2018, with the goal of promoting harmonious international cooperation between the future leaders of the United States and Ukraine, and potentially several other European countries as well.  With the knowledge that young leaders learn best from each other, especially in international settings, we will take young leaders ages 16-19 through a seven day journey of learning, working and socializing together, and experientially practicing and perfecting skill sets such as leadership, volunteerism, communication, conflict resolution and team building.”

     

    That was the plan, but the lessons in humility and patience had not yet been served.  Once we all realized that the small club in Truskavets simply didn’t have the capacity to take this project on by itself, I began to seek out other Rotary Clubs with which to partner, and my dream quickly morphed yet again into the idea of turning this conference into the reintroduction of RYLA in Ukraine.

     

    And that’s when the real magic (read: cooperation and collaboration) began.  During countless phone calls and meetings with the truly stellar leadership of District 2232, including then DG Serhii Zavadsky and DGE Mykola Stebljanko, with the eight Rotary Clubs in Lviv, and especially RC Lviv International, as well as with the benefit of some absolutely invaluable assistance and encouragement from US Rotarians, and especially P4P co-founder Steve Werner, we began to build the team and promote the dream, with more and more people at least listening to us as we took our story on the road and into cyberspace.

     

    I must express my appreciation for the support I received from PC Ukraine staff, including then Country Director Denny Robertson, his replacement right at the end of my time there, Michael Ketover, my Regional Manager Oksana Shabas, and the truly exceptional staff at PCHQ in Kyiv.  No one threw anything but encouragement and wise counsel at me during the arduous process of making connections and gathering support for the project.  As you will see, a project of this magnitude simply could not be accomplished without the highest possible levels of support from both RI and the US Peace Corps, and ultimately we were able to secure that support from RI General Secretary John Hewko and Peace Corps Director Jody Olsen, who both electronically forwarded messages of welcome to the first group of participants this past summer.

     

    There is of course so much more to this story, but I come back to my opening line, “Man plans…”.  Much to my dismay and disappointment, but perhaps not to the detriment of the project, I took ill and was medically separated from PC a little over a year into my service.  It was literally, “Pack your bags, you’re going home,” and I had a week to prepare for an arduous journey home and a long and even more arduous recuperation, but that’s really not germane to this story.  Here’s what is.

     

    By this point in my story, or the unfolding of my dream, we had moved a lot of people and created a momentum.  This was NOT an easy process for many reasons, not the least of which was the state of chaos so many sectors of the country were experiencing as a result of the systematic pillaging of this beautiful country by past regimes, and the difficulty of transforming from a corrupt, centrally planned economy to a truly free market.  There was a lot of inertia to overcome, a lot of people to convince that this project was not only worthy and possible, but necessary and destined to take place.

     

    One of the phrases we often tossed around was ‘failure is not an option’, and it certainly wasn’t for the real hero of this story, current Peace Corps Ukraine volunteer Shannon Carter, who took over the leadership of this project upon my departure from Ukraine.  I was fortunate to participate in weekly Skype conference calls from my home in Colorado, and I was floored by how much energy and enthusiasm Shannon put into this project.

     

    Shannon also assembled a great team of her fellow PCVs to plan and staff the inaugural RYLA conference, which took place in Lviv, Ukraine this past July to the delight and benefit of the 23 participants from three countries, plus the many Rotarians from several countries who also attended and supported Shannon and her team.

     

    The story gets even better, though, as Shannon is not only already underway planning RYLA Ukraine 2020, but has also convinced the powers that be in Rotary International and the Peace Corps that this relationship should be formalized, with the creation of a PC Response Volunteer position to assist in this process.  From my personal perspective, my dream was rescued from potential disaster and given not only new life, but it seems it now has legs as well.

     

    This is only the first part of the story, and since I wasn’t there to witness it, I’m not the writer to describe the actual event.  Nevertheless, I can speak to the phenomenal success of the partnership that was sought, nurtured and ultimately blossomed between the Peace Corps and Rotary in Ukraine, and to the patience and persistence required to bring a good project home.  I hope this can serve as a model for other such partnerships, and Shannon Carter a model for an extraordinary young woman who also happens to be a Peace Corps volunteer, and perhaps some day a Rotarian as well.

     October 27, 2019
  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Rotary Give-a-Book partners with Peace Corps Volunteer Jordan Mathews in Dominican Republic see more

    From 2016-2018, I served in the Peace Corps as a Youth Development Volunteer in a rural town, Gonzalo, Monte Plata in the Dominican Republic. For those of you of you familiar with the work of Peace Corps Volunteers, you will know that the work is slow, often ambiguous and it takes a whole lot of trial and error, emphasis on the “error,” before something sticks. One of my sticking points came from the work I was doing with my counterpart, Leo, the Director at our community’s local Community Technology Center (CTC.)

    The CTC is a government supported community space where kids and adults can go to do their homework, learn new skills and just have a safe place to congregate. At this center there is a preschool, a computer lab and a library, all programs that I have seem immensely positively affect our students. During my service, I spent countless days in the library. Not only was it one of the few places with somewhat reliable electricity, it was where I was able to see and connect with the kids and members of our community. Though I was not an education volunteer, while spending time in the library, the need for supportive literacy programs became obvious. Globally, the Dominican Republic falls low on literacy rates, as a way to help combat this, our CTC had tried time and time again (mostly unsuccessfully) to create reading groups for kids. However, as I began looking at the books available, the majority of books available were dense historical non-fiction, books that were not conducive to sparking the interest of young curious minds learning how to read. I wanted these kids to know the feeling that came with being completely enveloped in a story, the intense desire to read the next page or finish the next chapter in the book.

    My counterpart and I decided that it would be beneficial to get new books for the library that would inspire curiosity and excitement for young readers, but as we began exploring avenues to do that, we realized it would be much harder and much more expensive than anticipated. After months of looking into different options, we were not sure if and how we would be able to achieve this goal. But as soon as we began to feel defeated, I received an email from the Education Program Manager for PCDR about the Rotary Give-a-Book program, letting us know that select schools and centers would be approved to receive donated books in Spanish! It was an answered prayer.

    Excited, I told my counterpart and we reached out right away, soliciting books for our CTC. Later we learned that our community had been approved and would be receiving books for our library.  Because of this amazing program made possible by the generosity of Rotary members like yourselves, Gonzalo’s CTC received a box full of beautiful books that will allow a generation of young readers to tantalize their curiosities and explore the world, near and far, through books. For this, I am so grateful for the partnership that exists between Rotary International and the Peace Corps, so that more moments like this can be created for communities across the globe.

    Thank you to each of you for committing your life to promoting peace at home and abroad through supporting programs like Give-a-Book, this is the type of change that may seem small but can forever create long lasting impact.

     August 15, 2019
  • Charlie Hunt posted an article
    Rotary clubs support PCV water tank project in Vanuatu see more

    Report from Annalisa Berardinelli, PCV 2017-2019 at Nofo School, Emae Island, Vanuatu:

    There are about 200 people on the school grounds during the week, 8 families that live there, and 30 boarding students that also reside on the school grounds. Prior to these two tanks, there were only 3 other ones. The dry season lasts from about June to November. Last year and in 2017 there were school cancellations because of the lack of water available to students to drink during the day. So far this year there have been none. In order to enhance learning and create a healthy learning environment, there needs to be access to clean water. Moreover it is a right to have access to clean drinking water, which you and your club have allowed for these students and families. In addition, it inspired the school principal to ask some men to come clean and re-cement the inside of two other rain collection tanks on the grounds, creating a grand total of 7 sources of water (5 new ones this year). Thank you very much for your persistence and dedication to this project.