How
to Make Dreams Real
By Frank Deaver
Rotary Club of Tuscaloosa, Alabama
USA
Each year since 1949, the
president of Rotary International
has chosen and promoted a
theme, a word or phrase to
inspire and challenge Rotarians in
their community and worldwide
avenues of service.
President D.K. Lee has
chosen for Rotary Year 2008-09 the
theme
Make Dreams Real.
He emphasized the needs of
children, and the preventable causes
of sickness and death. Mentioning
water, health, hunger, and literacy,
he said "these are not just concerns
of developing countries." He
mentioned not only medical care, but
"safe places to play, seatbelts, and
smoke detectors." Local Rotary
Clubs, he said, "must identify and
address these concerns."
Many local clubs, President Lee
said, are already involved in
programs that fit these goals, and
he asked that any current projects
be seen to completion, but new,
related projects also be envisioned
and undertaken.
It is one thing to make plans
for the Rotary Year, he said, but
quite another thing to be sure they
are carried through to completion.
Making plans (dreaming)
is a first step, but accomplishing
those plans (making them real)
requires organization and leadership
that sets and accomplishes goals.
Throughout the Rotary world, in
more than 32,000 clubs, a new
president assumes club leadership
this month, aided by other officers,
directors, and committees. Each new
administration launches the year
with its own set of dreams about
what will be accomplished. But it
takes action to make those dreams
come true, and this is the thrust of
President Lee's theme message.
"We can do more as a club than
we could do as individuals," he
said. "We are able to do more
through Rotary than we could do
alone." He said Rotary has to be
seen as a whole, with dual emphasis
on fellowship and service.
"Rotarians should be in Rotary
because they want to give," he said,
"but we can and should also
acknowledge the many benefits to
Rotary membership."
A man came upon a construction
site where he saw three bricklayers
at work. He asked each one
individually the same question:
"What are you doing?"
The first answered, "Can't you
see, I'm laying bricks." The second
said, "Well, I'm helping to build
this wall." The third said, "I'm
working to construct a mighty
cathedral." Each bricklayer was
contributing his part, but only one
envisioned the finished project that
would Make Dreams Real.
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