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Davao City on the
Philippines is now a Rotary Peace City.
The Smiling Policeman, Past President Geoffrey Little of the Rotary Club
of Wollstonecraft, NSW spoke at the ceremony in his role as Rotary Peace
City Project Dean of Ambassadors.
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ROTARY PEACE CITY PROJECT
is all
GOOD
NEWS |
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First seen in Rotary Down Under - May 1999 |

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THE history of events since the dedication of Wagga Wagga,
N.S.W., as the first Rotary Peace City in the world in February, 1993,
shows that this great project has gained ground and strength around the
world. We all know that Rotary has had a long history of working for
peace, through different programs and themes, developing tolerance, harmony
and calm within communities, both nationally and internationally.
As far back as 1921,
with the adoption of the Object of Rotary, Rotarians have pledged in
the fourth object: "The advancement
of international understanding, goodwill and peace, through a world
fellowship of business and professional persons, united in the ideal
of service" to work for peace.
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Over
time, we have had three Rotary themes bearing the word peace. Firstly
in 1981/82 by President Stan McCaffrey World Understanding and Peace
Through Rotary, then Chuck Keller in 1987/88 Rotarians -United in Service-Dedicated
to Peace and 1995/96 Herb Brown with his theme Act with Integrity, Serve
with Love, Work for Peace.
The current Rotary Peace City/Town project started on November 13,
1990, when the Rotary Club of Wagga Wagga Kooringal agreed to support
the project, to dedicate Wagga Wagga as a Rotary Peace City and to
erect a peace monument in the city.
The project was officially launched in Wagga Wagga in October, 1991,
inspired by Past President Rajendra Saboo's theme Look Beyond Yourself
with the symbol of the dove of peace flying over the world taken
as the official Peace City/Town emblem.
On February 23, 1993, the first peace monument was unveiled by Past
World President Royce Abbey and the then Mayor Pat Brassil declared
the City of Wagga Wagga the first Rotary Peace City in the world.
There now are more than 20 peace counties, cities and towns in different
countries in the world. Manila, in the Philippines, was the second
Rotary Peace City to be declared on June 22, 1994, and the first
outside Australia.
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Soon to follow were Port Washington, Wisconsin,
U.S.A.; KBE and Ibaraki, Japan; East London, South Africa; Honolulu,
Hawaii, U.S.A.; Hiroshima, Japan; Cannes, France; the County and City
of Los Angeles and the City of Montebello, California, U.S.A; Milledgeville
and Baldwin County, Georgia, U.S.A; Windhoek, Namibia, Africa; Gifu City,
Japan; Zamboanga City, Philippines; Parksville, British Columbia, Canada;
Coolamon, N.S.W., Cities of Makati and Davao, Philippines, and Lockhart,
N.S.W. Cities of Makati, Philippines, and Lockhart, N.S.W., were declared
Rotary Peace Cities on February 23, 1999, and Davao City in the Philippines
on February 26, 1999.
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P
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Police and Community Working Together
and the promotion of vocational excellence |
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E
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Education through Rotary Peace City
Project Youth Ambassadors, MUNA and Rotary/UN-driven programs |
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A
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Armed services a recognised preservers
of peace and peacekeepers |
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C
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Civic community through Governments,
ambassadorships and peace ambassador awards for citizens |
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E
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Environmental programs through existing
Rotary projects and conservation programs |
The
first Rotary Peace City Conference was held at East Los Angeles in June,
1996, organised and chaired by Past President Paul Warner. of the Rotary"'
Club of the East Los Angeles. Representatives came from Rotary Peace
Cities around the world.
Plans are now under way to hold the next Rotary Peace City Conference
in Wagga Wagga, N.S.W., one week before the Sydney Olympic Games
in the year 2000.
This announcement was made at the District 9700 Conference at Young,
N.S.W. More than 25 Rotary Peace City Special Ambassadors have been
appointed since February 23, 1993. They are from Wollstonecraft,
Wagga Wagga Kooringal, Lockhart and Coolamon in Australia, and Manila,
Zamboanga, Makati and Davao in the Philippines, Kobe in Japan, Honolulu,
East Los Angeles, Milledgeville and Baldwin County, Port Washington
in Wisconsin USA and East London in South Africa.
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Cardinal Jaime Sin,
Catholic Archbishop of Manila in the Philippines has been appointed
an honorary special ambassador of the Rotary Peace City Project.
He is pictured with Past President Sergeant Geoffrey Little who is
Dean of Ambassadors
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Past
President Geoffrey Little, of the Club of Wollstonecraft, who was appointed
the Dean of Ambassadors, and Moto Nishimura of Japan, have travelled
to many countries throughout the world, successfully promoting the project.
The late Mother Teresa, who was the spiritual mentor for the project,
was appointed as an Honorary Special Ambassador, for her encouraging
letters. Her request that The Prayer of St Francis be read
at the dedication ceremonies has been followed.
CARDINAL Jaime Sin, Catholic Archbishop of Manila, has succeeded
the late Mother Teresa as spiritual mentor.
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On
July 1, 1998, District Governor Peter Walsh formed a new District 9700
International Peace Committee with Chairman Past President Tony Quinliv
and four other District Rotarians
This Committee is responsible for the promotion of peace activities
and for the chartering of Rotary Peace County, Cities and Towns,
both nationally and internationally. New Rotary Peace City/Town formation
kits have been set up by the District Committee. Following inquiries
from a number of interested clubs from different parts of the world,
these are being distributed.
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Rotarian
Motonubu Nishimura of Osaka, Japan at the Cowra Japanese War Cemetery
during a visit he made when attending the District 9700 Conference
at Young NSW. |
They
are available from the Rotary Peace City Committee in Wagga Wagga, N.S.W.
The aims and objectives of the Rotary Peace City/Town project are:
1.To have the Rotary Peace City Project, along with the Peace Symbol,
initiated by the Rotary Club of Wagga Wagga Kooringal accepted as
a Rotary International project and symbol.
2. To prompt Rotary International to encourage counties, cities,
towns and municipalities around the world to become declared R.I.-facilitated
peace cities, etc., and to display the peace symbol on peace monuments
or buildings or in prominent positions such as dedicated peace parks
or other prominent sites.
3. For participating Rotary clubs to sell the Rotary Peace City
Project peace symbol badges throughout the world, specially during
Rotary Peace and Understanding Month in February each year. February
23 is R.I. World Peace and Understanding Day.
4. To bring together the people of the world in the promotion of
lasting peace through International fellowship, understanding and
goodwill.
The Rotary Peace City Project involves promoting the concept of
peaceful coexistence through a wide variety of activities. The District
9700 Peace Committee can advise clubs of suggested peace projects
and is available to assist them in the implementation of these projects
at club level.
Rotary Peace and Understanding Day ceremonies on February 23 are
being encouraged at designated peace monuments and peace parks or
on an appropriate date each year. Dignitaries and citizens and local
and overseas students are invited to join the celebrations.
Rotary Peace City Project Ambassadorial Awards are being presented
to local citizens selected for giving outstanding voluntary service
to the community. Essay and colouring-in competitions with a peace
theme are suggested for students. A plank of the education process
of the Rotary Peace
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Past
President Dominic Williams, of the Rotary Club of Forbes NSW., PP Tony
Quinlivan, of the Rotary Club of Waga Wagga-Kooringla, NSW., Japanese
Rotarian Motonobu Nishimura, of Osaka, guest speaker Angry Anderson,
of Sydney NSW., PP Geoffrey Little of the Rotary Club of Wollstonecraft
NSW and District 9700 Governor Peter Walsh of the Rotary Club of Wagga
Wagga, NSW, at Young. |
City
Project is the promulgation of Model United Nations Assemblies II (MUNA)
through Past President Dominic Williams of the Rotary Club of Forbes,
N.S.W. He is the national MUNA chairman.
Conflict Resolution training and the Real Justice
Forum, involving the Wagga Wagga model Juvenile Conferencing Program,
are ingredients of the Rotary Peace City Project.
It is suggested that serious consideration be given
for clubs and Districts to include Conflict Resolution and Juvenile
Conferencing training through Rotary clubs and schools to encourage
wider participation in the Rotary Peace City Project.
Suggested fund raising activities should include
assisting in appropriate humanitarian programs and for students to
sell Rotary Peace City Project Peace Symbol badges in the community.
The Rotary Club of Millegeville, Georgia, U.S.A.,
raised $US15,000 for the victims of floods, fires and tornado disasters
in their state, as well as the tidal wave disaster in New Guinea.
A Rotary information display and fundraising day organised by the
combined Wagga Wagga Rotary Peace City clubs was held at Woolworths
and a collection at a football ground, raised more than $A2,500 for
the victims the tidal wave disaster in Papua New Guinea.
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Follow Your Rotary Dream
for a better world and as the late Mother Teresa said so simply:
The fruit of silence is prayer,
the fruit of prayer is love,
the fruit of love is service,
the fruit of service is unity and
the fruit of unity is peace".
Further reading:
Rotary Down Under, March, 1995, pages
19 and 20,
Rotary and the U.N. |
Further
information of the Rotary Peace City Project is available on the Internet
on a number of internationally-created web sites out of Australia, the
Philippines, Canada and the United States of America as well as The "Smiling
Policeman's" Police and Law Enforcement Fellowship of Rotarians
Web site PoLEPFoR.
To search for these sites, enter the words Peace+City+Project, and/or
Rotary+Club+of+Zamboanga+City or "The+Smiling+Policeman+ etc in
your preferred search engine eg Yahoo, Alta Vista, Excite etc. District 9700 Past Governor Wal Breust edits the Rotary Peace City
Project international newsletter which is available from the District
9700 Peace City Project Committee
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| JAPANESE
ROTARIAN INSPIRED BY MESSAGE OF PEACE
Rotarian Motonobu Nishimura, of Osaka, Japan, spoke
during the Rotary Peace City Project presentation at the District
9700 Conference in Young, N.S.W. He was the first Japanese national
to serve in the Middle East as a United Nations official. Rotarian
Motonobu is a Rotary Peace City Project Special Ambassador and spearheaded
the declaration of Rotary Peace Cities in Japan, Namibia, Hawaii
and France. He did this after learning that Manila in the Philippines
had been declared the first Rotary Peace City outside Australia.
Rotarian Motonobu travelled with PP Geoffrey Little and PP Dominic
Williams, of the Rotary Club of Forbes, N.S.W., to the Cowra Japanese
War Cemetery and the site of the WW2 Prisoner-of-War Camp where Japanese
prisoners broke out in 1944. The Smiling Policeman, Past President
Geoffrey Little, led the presentation. PP Geoffrey gave a progress
report on the growth of the Rotary Peace City Project and sought
a commitment from all delegates to create Rotary Peace Cities and
Towns in their own centres.
Past President Tony Quinlivan, of the Rotary Club
of Wagga Wagga-Kooringal, N.S.W., read a letter from Rotarian Robert
Stewart, from the Rotary Club of Okotoks, Calgary, Canada, praising
the Rotary Peace City Project. Rotarian Robert created the Peacebuilders
website and listserve following his introduction to the Rotary Peace
City Project at the R.I. Convention in Calgary by PP Geoffrey in
1996.
PP Geoffrey, of the Rotary Club of Wollstonecraft and formerly of
East Sydney, N.S.W., is the founding International Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of the Police Law Enforcement Professionals Fellowship
of Rotarians (POLEPOR). He is an honorary police officer in Scotland,
twice in the United States of America and in the Philippines. As
well, PP Geoffrey was the first Emissary to the Rotary Peace City
Project and is the honorary member of Rotary clubs of Wagga Wagga
- Kooringal, N.S.W., Makati-Edsa and Zamboanga City in the Philippines.
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