Stories
Members volunteer to help businesses at the Monthly 2nd Friday of the month BeChinatown
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2023 Walk to End Alzheimer's |
20K Meals for VeteransVolunteers packaged 20K meals for local veterans
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2023 Jan 20 ELANS Bunny Art Cart |
We are Rotary |
2023 Jan 7 Painting the Pediatric ward |
2023 Jan in GuatemalaMembers President Rhonda, Liz, Celine, Tom and Joline travel to Guatemala to install 3 Innovative Water Technologies units with H2OpenDoors ...
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Liz Mark Jan 2023 District Rotarian of the MonthCongratulations to Liz Mark of the Rotary Club of San Francisco Chinatown for being selected as Rotary District 5150's Rotarian of the Month for January 2023! ... read more
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2023 New Years Beach Clean UpWhat were you doing on New Years Day? Over 35 volunteers gathered at SF Ocean Beach to help clean up our city and make a difference in protecting our environment ...
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2022 Presbyterian Church in Chinatown food pantryMembers of our club volunteer at the Presbyterian Church in Chinatown food pantry ...
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2022 Thanksgiving at ELANSOur members volunteered to help serve lunch to immigrant students at the Edwin and Anita Lee Newcomers School (ELANS).
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2022 Sept 17 Gum Moon GalaThe Rotary Club of San Francisco Chinatown at the Gum Moon Annual Benefit Gala received the Carol Lee Award ....
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2022 Sept 17 Love Our City Neighborhood Beautification District 4Here we are again ... on CA Costal Cleanup day. Many SF Rotarians decide to participate in the SF DPW Love Our City - Beautification of District 4. We are Team 2 assigned to plant Trees. Where are the trees??? ...... |
Martin Yan Chinatown Tour, Sept 2, 2022Click here for Facebook Live video 1, Facebook Live video 2, Facebook Live video 3 continue to see more videos! Some lucky Rotary Club members and friends were invited to tour of SF Chinatown by Chef Martin Yan, of "Yan Can Cook" ...
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Mahjong and Poker SocialOur First Non-District District Grass Roots Mahjong and Poker Social! Food, Fun, and Friendship!
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Rotary Youth Leadership Awards - RYLA Aug 6, 2022What's RYLA? Rotary Youth Leadership Awards High School students from Marin, San Francisco, and the Peninsula applied to attend a free week at RYLA camp |
Beach Clean Up July 16, 2022We had about 35 volunteers come out this morning for our Monthly San Francisco Rotary Clean Up. This month the clean up was hosted by the Rotary Club of SF Sunset with Club President Marilyn Decastro-Becklehimer. Members from the Rotary Clubs of San Francisco Chinatown, SF Castro, SF#2, SF West, SF Evening, SF Fisherman's Wharf, and South SF participated. There were also a couple of walk-on volunteers! https://www.facebook.com/RCSFC/videos/370540978547467 |
Rotary’s Response to the 1918 Flu PandemicAn estimated 500 million people worldwide became infected. Many cities closed theaters and cinemas, and placed restrictions on public gatherings. Rotary clubs adjusted their activities while also helping the sick. This is how Rotary responded to the influenza pandemic that began in 1918 and came in three waves, lasting more than a year. The Rotary Club of Berkeley, California, USA, meets in John Hinkel Park during the 1918 flu pandemic. |
Rotary at the Start of the United NationsRotary and the United Nations have a shared history of working toward peace and addressing humanitarian issues around the world. During World War II, Rotary informed and educated members about the formation of the United Nations and the importance of planning for peace. Materials such as the booklet “From Here On!” and articles in The Rotarian helped members understand the UN before it was formally established and follow its work after its charter. Many countries were fighting the war when the term “United Nations” was first used officially in the 1942 “Declaration by United Nations.” The 26 nations that signed it pledged to uphold the ideals expressed by the United States and the United Kingdom the previous year of the common principles “on which they based their hopes for a better future for the world.”
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History of Women in RotaryWomen are active participants in Rotary, serving their communities in increasing numbers and serving in leadership positions in Rotary. The 1989 Council on Legislation vote to admit women into Rotary clubs worldwide remains a watershed moment in the history of Rotary. “My fellow delegates, I would like to remind you that the world of 1989 is very different to the world of 1905. I sincerely believe that Rotary has to adapt itself to a changing world,” said Frank J. Devlyn, who would go on to become RI president in 2000-01. The vote followed the decades-long efforts of men and women from all over the Rotary world to allow the admission of women into Rotary clubs, and several close votes at previous Council meetings.
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Young Inventor Eco-Friendly Bricks Come Full CircleEvery hero has an origin story. “I was 10 years old when the entire journey started,” explains Binish Desai. It began with a cartoon called Captain Planet, an animated TV series from the 1990s about an environmentalist with superpowers. Desai can still recite the show’s refrain: Captain Planet, he’s our hero / Gonna take pollution down to zero! “That tagline stuck in my mind,” he says. “I wanted to do something to help Captain Planet.” |
First Club in Philippines Opens Door to Rotary in AsiaIn early 1919, Rotarian Roger Pinneo of Seattle, Washington, USA, traveled to the Philippines to try to organize a Rotary club in Manila. Leon J. Lambert, a Manila business leader helped Pinneo establish the club. Several months later, on 1 June 1919, the Rotary Club of Manila was chartered and became the first Rotary club in Asia. The club would be the only one in the country for more than 12 years. Eventually, Manila club members organized Rotary clubs in the Philippine cities of Cebu (1932) and Iloilo (1933). Iloilo club members then started a club in Bacolod (1937), and Rotary continued to expand across the country. |