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Niles Rotary’s “Sight Now” Project in India

March 22, 2017 by rot13ad57min Leave a Comment

Niles Rotary Sight Now Project Video

According to National Institute of Health and a National Geographic Survey in September 2016, 285 million people suffer from blindness worldwide. Out of those, ninety percent of the cases are in developing countries. Forty-three percent is completely and easily preventable. Preventable blindness consists of refractive errors and cataracts in the eye. Visual impairment due to preventable blindness is a life changing event for a child and/or elderly person that are not covered by government or personal insurance. They simply do not have the means to pay for these simple procedures. Niles Rotary club and its lead volunteer, Geeta Kadambi, conducted a pilot project for Niles Rotary in Chennai, India in conjunction with the South Madras Rotary club in January of 2017. Sankara Nethralaya Eye Hospital was chosen to provide the treatment and eye care for the international project. Sankara Nethralaya Eye Hospital is a premier facility providing treatments such as eye check-ups, glasses and cataract surgery while using their mobile van to reach those in rural areas. The mobile eye clinic vans are equipped with lens grinding and glass making equipment for refractive error correction on the spot. Patient’s eyes are first checked for vision impairment and if correctable by providing prescription glasses, lenses are made the same day. If the checkup suggests the presence of cataract in the eye, then the patient is taken to the surgery clinic at the main hospital in Chennai. Shuttled to Chennai by bus, all their costs are covered. This includes their boarding, lodging, and post-operative care. The level of trust a villager must have is substantial considering the cost covered is only for the individual. No family members accompany them on the medical trip. They go it alone.

Geeta Kadambi, of Niles Rotary, first found interest in doing this project when she did her graduate work at the University of Madras (1989) and collaborated with Sankara Nethralaya Eye Hospital as she researched on preventing cataracts. At that time, she was not involved with Rotary. But this had remained in the back of her mind for all these years even as she completed her post doctoral work at the University of Minnesota (1992) also doing research on preventing cataracts. Fast forward some time, Geeta joined Niles Rotary of Fremont in 2015 and her passion for helping others found a new path involving others in the good work of helping these people in India. Previously, she had been involved for many years. Her family was familiar with receiving phone calls annually and being asked to make some donations to support this worthy cause. Now, with more public and community exposure through Rotary, her plans are becoming bigger and this is just the beginning. This was her pilot project for what she hopes to turn into something much larger, perhaps on a Rotary District Level or even something Rotary can take on as an organization in whole. Even as the as a fledgling first project, it was very successful. Audrey Kearns, Niles Rotary’s International Chair, supported Geeta from the get go by helping organize fundraisers and being supportive in helping Niles Rotary get behind this wonderful project. Niles Rotarians got behind Geeta and what she was planning to do.

Here Geeta, second from the left, poses with local Rotarians standing outside the Mobile Eye Clinic Bus in Kayyar Village

Typically, these Eye Bus clinics travel up to 125 kilometers per day to reach rural villagers. Without this service, these villagers who work in the fields or fishermen on the water daily, would never receive eye care of any sort. And with a simple free exam, glasses and surgery if necessary, someone who is dependent on the family can return to being a productive member of the family and society. It’s simply life changing. This leads to a life where the person served contributes economically, feels better about themselves individually by being able to contribute. This brings a sense of dignity at any age. Everyone understands how important it is to have some measure of independence. But, its not just the elderly that are served in these clinics. The ages vary across the board from small children to the aged. The following photo is one where a small three year old child had been injured while “climbing on things” and injured his eye and the left side of his face. His eye was bleeding but he had not yet lost sight when he arrived. The eye ball was fully ruptured. Even as he came to the clinic, he was happy and smiling. If he had not been seen quickly, he would have permanently lost sight in this eye for the rest of his life. Take a moment to imagine the change just this one surgery is going to have on this child. Look at his photo. How many years and life experiences just changed for the better from this one day’s events?

Little Boy Krishna arrives in Chennai for Emergency Eye Surgery – Geeta enjoyed playing with him during his wait time for surgery – he found a new Auntie!

For each international project a US Rotary Club selects, they need to have a relationship with a local Rotary club in the country where the international project is being conducted. There are multiple reasons why. Rotarians pay their own airfare, lodging and travel expenses so that all the funds raised goes directly toward the project. The reason Rotary International has a policy where you must coordinate with a local Rotary clubs is to make sure the funds are spent properly and wisely in the given country. They are the locals, they have good contacts and are wise as to costs, business customs and local culture. The club hosting the US club is also responsible for contributing money themselves and being involved in the actual work project itself. The South Madras Rotary Club contributed $2,000 toward the project bringing the total between the two clubs to $7,700 USD. Rotarians make new relationships with each other in the process and accomplish some of Rotary Internationals goals – world peace, better friendships and serving humanity.

Here Geeta Kadambi presents President Asha Marina of the South Madras Rotary Club with Niles Rotary’s Club flag during their weekly dinner meeting

In rural eye camps, people will line up for hours on end and patiently wait to be seen. People will travel from miles around when they know this organization is visiting their village. This eye hospital has been in existence for over thirty-eight years, so one of the most important considerations is that the local villagers trust this organization and what they do. In fact, local village elders will print flyers and walk home to home to advise their community members that the eye clinic is coming.

Here villagers from Kayyar village line up for their registration, examinations, and to learn if they may need cataract surgery or not

Below, you can see that the hospital must deal with situations where performing eye exams can be difficult due to the lack of adequate facilities. The staffs are well trained and have a positive attitude. They set up “camp” within about 20 minutes and start seeing patients all day long. This usually varies from 100 to 200 patients per day from 9am to 4pm. Imagine that many people coming through your eye doctor’s office in one day.

This building with no windows, doors and dirt floors became the eye camp clinic for the day that people in the humble village of Agaram came to be examined

One distinctive quality of the villagers in Agaram is that they are positive people and very gentle in nature. These hard working people work in the elements every day and have substantial sun exposure to their eyes and bodies. It’s so different from the pushy crowds of the big cities. They have no sense of entitlement and patiently wait their turn, knowing they will be taken care of before the days end. Working with the villagers in Agaram was a joy and this is type of people that benefit from projects such as these.

Here you can see a traditional village home of a family in Agaram Village. Their main source of employment is fishing and agriculture. There is a beauty about these people.

During this specific trip, the contributions of Niles Rotary and the South Madras Rotary Club of $7,700 allowed Geeta and the Sankara Nethralaya Eye Hospital to serve 338 patients overall and of those patients, 93 received cataract surgeries where they were transported to Chennai for a three day visit. The cost for each individual eye exam only runs at $5/person. This includes staff costs, transportation of the clinic, examination fees and production of glasses when needed. For the cataract surgery, the cost is $65/person which includes transportation to and from the hospital, surgery costs, recovery, boarding and lodging and any post operative medical care needed.

Here is a patient having a ‘Slit-Lamp Examination’ to evaluate their eye prescription. This is an examination taking place in Kayyar Village

Here you can see patients recovering from cataract surgery in a clean and comfortable environment. The care is of excellent quality

In summary, Geeta Kadambi was humbled and moved by the experience she had in involving Niles Rotary, the South Madras Rotary Club and the people that were served by this project. This is how it goes. Being a Rotarian means giving a little time, giving a little money, giving a little of yourself and on occasion taking on a project that alters the lives of those in different places around the world. You can see the pure joy on Geeta’s face here in the last photo as she is serving her friends and fellow human beings in India. This photo was captured on her last day at the eye camp. You see, as quoted by Richard D. King, being a Rotarian is an act of selfishness. Ask yourself who benefited most? Was the person being served from the village the one that gained the most? Were the members of the South Madras Rotary Club when they saw Rotarians from Fremont, California on the other side of the globe doing something selfless to help their fellow community members the ones who benefited most? Or was it Geeta, who took on a project that was quoted as saying “it changed who I am and how I view life”. Her perspective has been altered permanently. So who benefited most? Who knows. Does it matter? We do know all involved benefited greatly from this project.

Maybe you should be involved with one of our projects and see for yourself, what it means to be a Rotarian. Rotarians all agree that when returning from international projects that they didn’t really know what Rotary was all about, until they had completed in person an experience doing international service.

Geeta Kadambi enjoying her service to others in Agaram, a humble fishing village in southern India.

Article and Interview with Geeta Kadambi by Paul Andrus

Filed Under: Service Projects

Kids Against Hunger Community Service Project

March 4, 2017 by rot13ad57min Leave a Comment

Niles Rotarians made a nice difference on Saturday, March 4th, 2017. They showed up to pack food for kids domestic and international. Each member paid $20 to help cover the costs of the food we packed and some contributed substantially more! Thank you – you know who you are.

Here you can see the Niles Rotary Crew at their food packing stations ready to get started!

Here is Sherry, our guide and the amazing woman behind it all. When she retired from banking, she wanted to make a difference and do something good, but never anticipated exactly how much impact she and this organization would end up having. The organization was started in 2010 and produced something around 130,000 meals. Below I will share a photo of their results in the last two years! It’s down right amazing!

The food that goes into these packages is really important because allergies, religion and nutritional value are important factors when considering international delivery. The organization is not a religious organization, but many of those heavily involved are faith driven folks, like Sherry.

The food we were packing today was going with a pastor from Castro Valley to the Philippines to be delivered by hand. There are many indigenous groups in Southeast Asia, that have always lived on the seas. In the Philippines as well as in other countries such as Thailand. These peoples, while not actually Thai or Filipino have lived along the coasts and survived by fishing alone. Eventually they began to build stilt houses along the beaches. This became problematic when the local governments began regulating and taxing these folks in the fishing industry. Even if they were not so much in the business of catching and selling their fish. In Thailand, these folks were banned from fishing areas they had been fishing for many generations when laws were passed to protect the seas and land near them as they became designated as national parks. This along with over fishing and the continuing contention in the South China Sea about fishing have forced these peoples to begin to migrate and become more permanent on land. They have become marginalized and now are the poorest of the poor. Our project today was to send food to these people in the Philippines.

Here Sherry Higgs, Director of Drivers for Survivors, is busy putting labels on the food packaging in preparation for our assignment today. Jeff Schinkel arrived early and was promptly put to work in effect serving two shifts. The Niles Rotary Crew was also complimented with a few other groups including a birthday party of tweens, a group from a high school in Danville and another church related group. All in all, we packed 13,500 meals between all of us. That’s pretty amazing, right? Think how many stomachs that will fill?

We felt great, had fun and then went out to enjoy the Pleasanton farmer’s market and broke bread at Nonni’s in old downtown Pleasanton. Good times, good people, good work! Make sure not to miss the next Niles Rotary Community Service Activity coming up in April. We can always use helping hands. As Sherry of Kids Against Hungers said so aptly as she taught the youth at the end of the project “Many Hands Makes Light Work”. Thank you Niles Rotarians!

Article Contributed by Paul Andrus, Community Service Chair

Filed Under: Service Projects

Republic Services Helps Niles Rotary with the Blacow Elementary School Project

November 16, 2016 by rot13ad57min Leave a Comment

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New Member Maria Mendoza takes an active role in Niles Rotary immediately!

Taking an active role in the communities we serve is important to Republic Services and we take pride in the partnerships fostered in Fremont. This year, Republic Services donated four cubic yards of wood chips to the Blacow Elementary School’s beautification project, sponsored by Niles Rotary.
For four years now Niles Rotarians have donated funds and their hands-on labor to help make Blacow School a better place for its students to learn. Rotarians have added classroom doors, rebuilt benches and tables, and added planting and irrigation to help beautify the playground area. This year they’ve added trees, drought tolerant plants and drip irrigation. The wood chips donated by Republic Services will be used to spread around new plants and trees.

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Thank you Republic Services for your active role in our community

Together Republic Services and Niles Rotary are working together to make Fremont a beautiful place for our children to grow and learn.

Article Contributed by Paul Andrus, Niles Rotary Community Service Chair 2016-2017

Filed Under: Service Projects

Bay Area Community Services (BACS) Sponsored Halloween Party by Robertson High Interactors

November 11, 2016 by rot13ad57min Leave a Comment

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Robertson High School Interact Club, sponsored by the Rotary Club of Niles (Fremont) began World Interact Week with a Nacho, Popcorn, and Cotton Candy Party supporting Bay Area Community Services for Marginal and Homeless Adults. Niles Rotarians in an effort to Keep Calm and Serve On (club motto), Serve Humanity (Rotary International motto) while Attracting the Young, Having Fun and Getting More DONE (District motto) donated funds to the Robertson Interactors and attended the event. Robertson Interactors have been working on their DDS Project for months. It began in early September with a visit to the Bay Area Community Services Wellness Center in Fremont to meet with the center clients to assess their basic needs for the upcoming winter. The clients come from various places, some are homeless (campers) and some are marginal adults. The kids, with the assistance of the Peer Counselor, held a meeting and requested the clients to fill out wish lists on small post its to be deposited in to a wish box created by the students.
The wish box was taken back to the school where as a part of their Interact club and Leadership Class they worked with their teacher and Interact advisor Paul Barry to develop a plan for purchase of the most needed items.
The students decided to create Winter Relief packets that would include reusable rain ponchos, head lamps and two pair of socks (good socks as requested by the clients). They were also able to obtain donations of toiletries from the traveling Rotarians, blanket, pillows and water bottles.
The Wellness Center had planned a Halloween Party for its clients on October 31, 2016. The Interactors along with Niles Rotarians were invited to attend. The interactors volunteered to create and facilitate a list of games, assist with set up and attend the party with the distribution of the Winter Relief Packets ending the day.
Two of the goals of World Interact Week are to engage Interactors and to inspire creativity. Sixteen Interact students attended the event. They set up, cooked a meal, made a green frothy drink, served the clients and yes ran a host of games that had everyone smiling, laughing and cheering. This club has certainly accomplished the World Interact goals as they stepped out of their comfort zone to obtain additional donations to purchase sleeping bags or blankets for this challenged group of individuals. In their enthusiasm to meet the needs of the clients at the BACS Wellness Center, the students scoured the community for additional discounts or donations. They hit the jackpot at Kohl’s in Fremont; Kohl’s staff not only attended the event but will be making a donation that will allow the students to complete their mission and ensure that clients will be a little warmer and drier in the next few months. Congratulations Robertson High School Interactors for a job well done with heart and caring.

Article Submitted by Rose Evernden-Andrade, Niles Rotary President-Elect

Filed Under: Service Projects

The Blacow Elementary School Project

September 30, 2016 by rot13ad57min Leave a Comment

Niles Rotarians have a rich history in working with schools. Recently we have focused for several years in benefiting Blacow Elementary. Steve Landon has been an instrumental figure in this ongoing relationship. Being in the construction industry with JR Griffin Construction, Steve has been a natural with the work, tools and helping Niles Rotarians literally get their hands dirty, clothing smudged with paint or just plain sweaty digging holes for shrubs, trees and other things that needed to be planted.

On September 10, 2016 Niles Rotary organized a force of 50 strong, mainly composed of Rotarians, but with a show of force made by CarMax (thanks to our organizing Rotarian Josh Carlson at the YMCA). We also had Interactors and Rotoractors show up and help as well.

We replaced worn backboards for the basketball standards, painted a huge colorful map of the United States on the playground and planted somewhere between 20 – 30 trees and shrubs. It was a great project and those involved had a good time. We believe in feeding our volunteers well and provided breakfast sandwiches from the Depot Cafe (Past President Lisa’a Place) and yummy Bronco Billy’a pizza for lunch (vegetarians were catered to as well 😊). We want to thank Principal Jose Hernandez for always being there to open doors and coordinate staff to help us accomplish this project. He is a genuine pleasure to work with!

Prior to the “day” of the service project, Steve Landon, Kai Andrus and Kai’s friend helped paint and prepare the backboards by painting them.

And a couple weeks after the event, Steve returned with Rich Godfrey and myself (Paul Andrus, Community Service Chair) to install a drip watering system so our plants can survive this sunny Mediterranean climate.

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Thank you to all your wonderful volunteers who take time on your busy weekends and from you busy lives to make Fremont a more beautiful place. You do make a difference!

Paul Andrus, Community Service Chair

Filed Under: Service Projects

Boccé at Casa di Prescott

August 16, 2016 by rot13ad57min Leave a Comment

It was a hot but beautiful day in Livermore on Saturday, August 13 when our host Bruce Prescott opened up Casa Di Prescott and its backyard to welcome the fellowship of Niles Rotarians for the annual Bocce tournament. About 40 people showed up for fun, food and fellowship that afternoon and they were not disappointed!

Our BBQ Master “Bubba” fired up the grill so that we could feast on his delicious Tri-tip, chicken and hotdogs. The food was amazing. Judy Coleman and Dave Smith’s salads were awesome! Everyone raved about Bubba’s baked beans and Lana’s “Sex in a Pan” was to die for! We stayed well hydrated in the heat with cold beverages and wine that flowed throughout the day. It was great seeing Paul Parhiala’s grandkids and Sam Forbes boys having a fun time in the pool and playing with Bruce’s Reverse Raffle prize dog and best friend, Jake. While the grill was going, teams were formed and matches played. Manohar’s son, Saideep, showed the “old folk” a thing or two on the bocce court. The final rulings were given by Bocce master Steven Lloyd and in the end the victory was seized by Don and Sandy Cole!

If you weren’t able to make it this year, I’m hoping that we left Casa Di Prescott’s better than we found it so that you will have a chance to come and experience the fun next year!

Submitted by Lisa Lorenz

Filed Under: Member Social

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