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Thoughts On Being Rotary’s First Female Trustee

 

"Being the “first” of anything is a mixed blessing.  Being the first female Trustee of the Rotary Foundation is a dream come true for me.  It is the Rotary dream job.  I believe that the last 18 years of my Rotary journey inevitably led me to this destination.  I do truly believe that the work I have done for Rotary, the experiences I have gained as a Rotarian, my professional background and my personal life have prepared me to be a fully participating and qualified Trustee.  I hope that Rotarians will feel that I belong on the board.  The worse part about being the first of anything is if people think that you got the job because of whom you are and not because of what you did.  I don’t want anyone to think I am a Trustee because I am a woman.  I am a Trustee because I earned the job.  For the next four years, I will prove it.  Having to prove yourself is one of the mixed blessings of being “first.”

 

Thoughts on Having Women in Leadership Positions

 

On the other hand, being “first” gives one a unique platform and visibility that can be used for the greater good of the organization.  Since my appointment, I have represented the Trustees at a number of special events in the United States, Canada and the Philippines.  At the regional event in the Philippines, I met Rotary women from over 20 countries in south Asia.  They were so happy to have me there and so excited to meet me.  They were so proud of me.  Meeting them made me realize how much the women of Rotary had been waiting for a woman to reach one of Rotary’s highest leadership positions, and how much they needed to be able to see a woman in such a leadership role.  In the best of all possible worlds, it should not matter if Rotary’s leaders are male or female.  But in the 18 years that women have been members of Rotary, no woman has ever held the position of Foundation Trustee or Rotary Director.  These women saw in me that the wait is over.  There is still room for more women to show their leadership skills as Rotarians but the appointment of the first female Trustee sends the message that the wait is over and the door is open for them as well as for me. The first and most important reason why women are needed in leadership and decision-making positions is to send a message to other capable women that there is a place for them in the organization.  There is a crack in the glass ceiling.  If an organization is going to retain its strong, talented, capable members – male or female – those individuals have to be able to believe that all doors are open to them.

 

The next and most obvious reason for having women in high places is to get the benefit of their life experiences as women.  For some women, it may mean the experience of childbirth and childrearing; for others it may be the experience of being the homemaker and caring for elderly parents.  Not only do these experiences give women insight into these particular roles but the assumption of these roles force women to develop specialized skills.  For example, no homemaker could possibly succeed without being able to multi-task: cooking, cleaning, shopping, carpooling, budgeting, banking, social gatherings, corresponding.  The term “multi-tasking” has just recently made its way into our daily vocabulary but women have been multi-tasking for generations.  Now they can bring that skill to the boardroom." CAROLYN E. JONES 2006 

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