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February 28, 2020 
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Celebrate Peace Month with the RAGFP

Hello Rotarian Action Group for Peace members, peace partners and friends,
 
February is a beautiful month for Humanity. We celebrated Rotary’s 115th birthday, Rotary Peace Month, United States Black History Month and of course Valentine’s day. When we experience all these beautiful celebrations, we recognize the beauty of vision followed by action. February is a perfect month to recognize how since its birth, Rotary has strived for the betterment of humanity.  During these occasions, we celebrate how Rotary unifies the most meaningful human values: Peace, Love, Service and Human Rights.
 
Celebrating Rotary peace month at the same time as Rotary’s birthday is a strong reminder of how peace is central to Rotary’s legacy. Celebrating peace in conjunction with American Black History Month is a reminder for Peacebuilders that protecting minority rights is a vital component of peacebuilding.  Peace is not complete without recognizing the needs of minorities by offering sustainable solutions for their problems based on universal Human Rights.
 
Minorities beautify the fabric of our shared humanity. I am deeply touched by Bessie Coleman. She is an icon of black history. As a young black woman in the early days of aviation, she was limited by a lack of opportunities to obtain aviation training in the United States. She did not accept "no" as an answer. This fierce and determined woman saved up money, earned scholarships and taught herself French to go to flying school in France. She achieved her goal of becoming a pilot and in 1921 became the first American black woman to earn a pilot’s license.
 
Bessie’s story highlights the worldwide problems many minorities face with equal access to opportunity and resources. In her words, “I decided blacks should not have to experience the difficulties I had faced, so I decided to open a flying school and teach other black women to fly.” Bessie’s story reminds us of all the iconic black leaders throughout history and in Rotary who have paved paths for peace and opportunity.
 
Rotarian peacebuilders directly address the issue of limited access by providing service to minorities through peace projects. Rotary promotes Positive Peace by shifting the purpose of current systems towards structures and attitudes, that follow Bessie’s example by helping to uplift and provide an opportunity to minorities. Rotarian peacebuilders tackle head-on the issue of limited access in all our areas of focus. We provide access to clean water, health, economic development and peace for all. Rotarian peacebuilders recognize that peace efforts must be intentionally inclusive. We unify the world around our humanitarian projects. Thus, by default, we are celebrating, including, and empowering minorities worldwide. 
 
Bessie had to travel to France to access education for her chosen passion. She then selflessly made that same opportunity available to others at home. Rotarians follow her example by bringing opportunity and peace to the homes of those in need worldwide. 
 
Wage Peace, 
Reem 
Image result for Rotary Peace DoveFebruary is Rotary Peace Month, and we are so excited to celebrate with our peacebuilders. Rotary International has Peace and Conflict Resolution as Rotary's sixth Area of Focus. The month of February is a time where Rotarians honor the work of Peacebuilders all over the world. Rotary International's call to action for Peace is to join the RAGFP. Why? We are made up of a global network of like-minded Rotarians and peacebuilders who are motivated and engaged to wage peace at the grassroots level and abroad. 

Here at the RAGFP, we celebrate Peace not only in February but all 365 days in the year because we know that Peace is the answer to all of humanity's obstacles. We empower peace leaders around the world to focus on peace action by connecting, convening, and collaborating for sustainable positive peace. Our resources and support are vital for the wheel of peace to continue to turn. Your membership and generous contributions provide the momentum behind the Rotarian wheel of peace to improve the lives of all humanity. 
WAGE PEACE: Join the RAGFP today!

This month, the RAGFP was given the wonderful news that our Activate Positive Peace workbook will soon be added to the Institute for Economics and Peace’s Positive Peace Academy. This workbook was piloted at the 2019 Rotary Convention in Hamburg, praised at 2019 Geneva Peace Week, and is now ready for Peacebuilders to utilize and strategize effective positive peace anywhere in the world. Check out our website to view the workbook and learn how to activate positive peace in your community and beyond.


Pioneers of Peace are People of Action

The RAGFP strives to pioneer Rotarian peace action. Reem's latest article on RAGFP's strategy to activate Peacebuiders around the world was featured in the Rotary Services Blog this month.  "RAGFP believes that we can lead peace through service. Peace is the essential humanitarian cause to meet all of Rotary’s objectives. Service is the essence of peace leadership in Rotary. When RAGFP combines peace and service, we enhance the experience, expand the outreach, and optimize the engagement for Rotary’s members to thrive as people of action."
 Read Reem's full article here and learn how you can wage peace with the RAGFP. 

RAGFP February Activities

Image may contain: 2 people, people sittingSponsored by various Rotary clubs from District 5100, Marthe Cohn, the author of Behind Enemy Lines, told her incredible story of how she survived the Holocaust to an inspired audience of Rotarians and peacebuilders. Even at 99 years old, Marthe continues to wage peace by advocating for minorities and oppressed people everywhere. Thank you to Larry Strober, fellow RAGFP member who was instrumental in mobilizing the District to support this exceptional story of peace with the wider community. The RAGFP thanks him for his leadership on peace and for his invitation to the RAGFP to join this event. Reem was honored to represent the RAGFP at the gathering to witness Marthe’s story of bravery and resilience. 

Thank you to the Rotary Club of Salida in District 5220 for inviting Reem to present to your Rotary Club in celebration of Rotary Peace month and Rotary's 115th Birthday.  Contact the RAGFP if you want your Rotary Club to learn more about the RAGFP and our Peacebuilder Club programs.

Does your District need a Peace Project?
The 2nd Annual RAGFP Middle East Peace Education Trip

Join the RAGFP on a Peacebuilder experience of a lifetime with Palestinian Peace Fellow, Reem Ghuniam, and Israeli Peace Fellow, Yuri Haasz as your local guides.

Does your Rotary District want to participate in a Global Grant in the Middle East?  Sponsor a member of your Rotary District to serve as a representative participant in the RAGFP Middle East Peace Education Trip.

This second-annual trip serves as an opportunity for peacebuilders to reconnect with Rotary's Peace Area of focus by advancing goodwill, gaining mutual understanding, and collaborating with peace actors in Israel and Palestine. RAGFP's educational mission is to establish a citizen diplomacy approach to conflict where we meet, interact, and converse with Israeli and Palestinian grassroots peacebuilders to understand the current opportunities and challenges to Peace in the region. Representatives will learn about the obstacles to peace in Israel and Palestine first hand, strategize effective peace action with local peacebuilders, and bring back opportunities for your District to create Rotary Global Grants with the RAGFP to Wage Peace in the Middle East.

Act now! Registration ends April 1st and seats are limited.  

To learn more about the Middle East Peace Education Trip, visit our website, check out our FAQs, or email us at contact@rotariansforpeace.org.

RESERVE YOUR SPOT
Positive Peace Impact
The educational mission of this trip is for participants to gain an in-depth understanding of the conflict between Israel and Palestine from both perspectives on tImage result for lightbulb"he ground. Through mutual understanding and Rotarian leadership, the goal of this experience is to create high-impact, multi-district Peace Projects that promote sustainable peace for the communities facing conflict in the Middle East. 
Rotarian Peace Projects Incubator

Want to build sustainable Global Grants for peace?

Be immersed in a peacebuilding experience unlike any other at the Rotarian Peace Projects Incubator at the Maison de la Paix in Geneva. Work in interdisciplinary teams of Rotarians, Peace Fellows, experts, and organizations to design measurable, specific Peace Projects. Each project will aim to improve a community in need in one of ten different focus areas. By the end of the Incubator, each team will have established a strategic plan for a positive peace project for a community in need. That's a total of 20 sustainable Peace Projects specifically tailored to communities around the globe.

Register or donate today for the Rotarian Peace Projects Incubator.

Don't know if the Rotarian Peace Projects Incubator is right for your club? Answer the questions in the flow chart below to see your results.
Positive Peace Impact
Image result for lightbulb"The Incubator brings the interdisciplinary teams to focus on a specific peace obstacle in a region in need This intense focus ensures that the Peace Projects are analyzed from all angles to create a customized strategy for effective, sustainable peace for that community.  perspectives on the ground. 
Hello RAGFP Peacebuilder Clubs

Have you received your official RAGFP Peacebuilder Club certificate and information email? Send us pictures of your RAGFP Peacebuilder Club certificate with your Club's Peace Committee. We want to share spread of our Global Peacebuilder Club network with the world.

The RAGFP has some exciting additions to the Peacebuilder Club program that we want to share with you.  Read the list below to learn about how your Peacebuilder Club can wage peace with the RAGFP. Become a Peacebuilder Club today!

1. Join the Rotarian Action Group for Peace
If you haven’t already, become a member of the RAGFP. Members get exclusive access to the RAGFP’s educational resources, the peacebuilder network, project promotional outlets, and project consultation. Members of the RAGFP obtain the tools and support to create the most effective and sustainable peace projects worldwide.

2. Join the Global Peacebuilder Club Network Facebook group
We are inviting all Peace Committee chairs to our private Global Peacebuilder Club Network Facebook group. This group is to help facilitate and enhance the collaboration, engagement, and community between Peacebuilder Clubs around the world. We want three representatives from every Peacebuilder Club to join our Facebook group to ensure equal representation of all clubs, no matter the size. Send an email to contact@rotariansforpeace with the emails of your 3 Peace committee members to invite to the group.

3. Get informed on the latest Peace education
Make sure you review and subscribe to RAGFP monthly newsletter where you can stay up-to-date on the latest news regarding Peacebuilder Club projects and other global Rotary Peace initiatives. Take a look at our Peacebuilder Club Primer to get inspired for your next Peace Project. 

4. Start a Peace Project
Combined with your passion for peace, the peacebuilder network, RAGFP educational peace resources, and your Club’s Peace Committee, it’s time to launch your next Peace Project. Don’t know where to start? Read our newsletter, join the Global Peacebuilder Club Network Facebook group, and check out our Peace Projects page for inspiration. For project consultation, email RAGFP at contact@rotariansforpeace.org for assistance with project strategy, promotion, and grants proposals.

5. Apply for a Global Grant
Have a big idea for your Peacebuilder Club’s next Peace Project? Apply for a Rotary Foundation Global Grant. Rotarians, Rotary Clubs, and Districts that wish to pursue peace projects may apply for Global Grants in the RI area of Focus category of Peace, Conflict Prevention, and Resolution. These grants can range between $15,000 to $100,000 depending on the project. Learn more about Global Grants on our website and be sure to contact the RAGFP for a grant consultation. 

6. Share your Peace Project on the RAGFP website. 
RAGFP Members can post their Peacebuilder Club projects on our website’s Peace Projects page. Check out our Peace Projects page regularly to see what Peace projects RAGFP members are completing around the world. You can also post your Peace Project to fellow Peacebulder clubs on our Facebook Group. 

7. Engage with Rotary Peace Fellows

Utilize our Peace Directory to connect with Rotary Peace Fellows. Invite them to speak at your next Rotary Club meeting to learn about their work in the field of Peace.

Positive Peace Impact
Image result for lightbulb"Who knows the problems that face your community best? Your community. Activate your Peacebuilder club to find strategic solutions to wage peace within your community and beyond. Peacebuilding at the local, grassroots level is the most effective means for peace all around the world. Start in your community today.
Syria: ranked 162/163
For 2020, the RAGFP is featuring the obstacles to peace in the world's least peaceful nations. We want to demonstrate what efforts are currently being done to create pathways to peace and the positive peace impact Rotarians can wage in the regions that need it most.  Here's a link to our first feature on Afghanistan

Alia is a refugee from Aleppo.The last thing I remember of Syria before we left, was when my mother was taking me from our place to our grandparents. The roads were full of dead corpses,” said Alia, a 7-year-old Syrian refugee who fled her home in Aleppo to Damour, Lebennan. “I miss my home a lot. I hope one day we’ll be back and things will be just like before.” Like Alia, hundreds of thousands of Syrians tell similar stories of destruction, loss, and despair.  According to the Institute of Economics and Peace's (IEP) Global Peace Index, Syria is the second least peaceful nation in the world after Afghanistan. The 9-year Civil war has left most of the nation's residents displaced from their homes. IEP determined that Syria has the highest rates of criminality, terrorism, access to weapons, violent demonstrations, political terror, and death due to internal conflict. 

Image result for syria mapFor innocent civilians in Syria, everything seems to be falling apart with fear on their doorstep. Their native towns are no longer recognizable under the rubble of the battlefields of civil war. Since 2011, over 11.9 million Syrians have been displaced-- 900,000 of them fled the country in December of 2019 alone after the airstrikes in Idlib. Families are forced to live in smaller and smaller areas with camps over full capacity sharing scarce resources between them. Every moment, Syrian refugees are fighting hunger, diseases, poverty and social isolation, making daily survival the main concern. Emergency assistance of clean water, food, shelter, and medical supplies are necessary for the ever-rising number of refugees just trying to survive each day. Over 3 million children are not in school due to the conflict, in addition to suffering from serious trauma and horror that can cause disruptions to their mental, emotional, and social development. Many of these children are unaccompanied, leaving them vulnerable to trafficking, labor, and other social abuses. Because of the many conflict zones in Syria, supplying resources to certain communitiesImage result for syrian refugee camp can be very dangerous and difficult. During times of crisis, Rotarians historically have been the people of action to serve. The crisis in Syria is no different. As Rotarians, we have a commitment to serve and provide humanitarian support to our friends in Syria. 

Peace through Emergency Humanitarian Aid

Most Refugees are suffering from hunger, malnutrition, thirst, and disease. Half of the Syrian refugees are under the age of 18, leaving them vulnerable to problems in their physical, emotional, mental and social development. Their childhoods are stolen by the prolonged Syrian conflict, which can fragment their known world and belief system. The uncertainty of when or where your next meal will come from, if you and your family are safe, if you are warm enough to sleep through the night, or there are enough medical supplies to tend to your child's wounds are the fears that constantly fill the minds of Syrians in Refugee camps. International Aid organizations are working with Syrian refugees to help combat basic aid for survival so families can eventually rebuild their lives once again. International Rescue Committee (IRC) and their partner organizations have treated over 853,000 patients with primary, reproductive and trauma care in 2018 alone. They are the largest provider of healthcare in northeast Syria as well as the only international agency providing mental health services and emotional support across the medical facilities. Young Syrian child holding grey blankets with an orange hat standing in front of a ShelterBox tentThe IRC supplies emergency cash assistance to support vulnerable Syrians to meet immediate family needs such as water, emergency healthcare, food, and shelter. UNICEF has been helping provide emergency aid to Syrian children specifically. They have helped over 295,000 people with water, sanitation and hygiene services, as well as over 8,000 women and children with nutrition support.

Rotary partner, ShelterBox has been working to help Syrian refugees since 2011, making it their longest, most sustained response yet. ShelterBox has helped over 250,000 refugees survive the extreme heat of summers and freezing temperatures of the Syrian winters by providing thermal blankets, tents, mattresses, and mosquito nets. Once these emergency needs are met, Rotarians and international organizations can focus on building sustainable healthcare facilities, provide opportunities for economic well being, and safety. 

Positive Peace Impact
Image result for lightbulb"Programs that provide immediate relief to basic human needs allows for the Syrian refugees to alleviate some of the stress of the daily instabilities and focus on rebuilding their lives as it once was prior to conflict. 

Rebuilding Community

When anyone is forcibly removed from their homes, rebuilding a sense of community, unity, and belonging is extremely difficult. Refugees who have sought asylum in other nations often face prejudice and poverty on top of the trauma of fleeing their country. When you flee your home with nothing, finding stability in a community to help support you after times of crisis is essential to helping refugees rebuild after tragedy.

Rotarians all over the world are also making huge positive impacts by helping refugee families.In Nova Scotia, Canada, the Rotary Club of Amherst brought two families from Syria to their country, where the refugees are starting a new life. The club galvanized other community groups to help the families assimilate with the town and culture while respecting their long journey and trauma. When Refugee human needs are met and they are surrounded by a safe and welcoming community, that is when resilience and conflict healing can begin. Other ways that Rotarians can build back safe communities for Syrian refugees is by providing safe education opportunities for children and adults who have missed out on their traditional education system, create sports teams for inclusion and social development, and help provide counseling and mental health services for refugees to heal from their trauma. 

                                                  Positive Peace ImpactImage result for lightbulb"
Community support after times of crisis is one of the most fulfilling ways to heal from trauma. By building paths to living a normal life, hope is restored within communities to rebuild after a crisis. Refugees are in need of finding a home after living in constant fear and human instability. Creating a supportive, welcoming environment for refugees to heal after trauma creates sustainable peace. 
Together, peacebuilders and the RAGFP can help Syrian refugees in their time of need. If you feel inspired to learn more about how you and your club can wage peace in Syria, please take the survey below. 
RAGFP Syria Peace Project Survey
Read our January Newsletter for our Afghanistan 163/163 feature
RAGFP Members Wage Peace
Rotary Club The Hague Metropolitan Combats Human Trafficking

Estela Landeros is a Rotarian and lifelong educator who has tirelessly worked to eliminate human trafficking from schools worldwide. She partnered with Just Ask Prevention, a non-profit that educates teachers and students about the signs of human trafficking, as well as strategies to protect their communities. Estela began this project when she was president of her new club, The Rotary Club of West Springfield, when she learned that human trafficking was present at the schools their club was sponsoring. Human trafficking is a global crisis. Globally, over 24.9 million people are being trafficked for labor or sex. In the US alone, hundreds of thousands of people have been reported as victims of human trafficking. Needing more information about the problem before tackling it, Estela contacted Bill Woolf, Executive Director of Just Ask Prevention, to learn more about how insidious trafficking really is and what her Rotary Club could do about it.  “What we learned, which was not only sad, but devastating, led us to get involved, get trained, and sponsor a project in one of the local schools,” said Estela describing how she felt after Woolf's presentation... Continue reading here. 

Positive Peace Impact
Image result for lightbulb"This project strategically provides education and training for educators, organizations, and police officers on how to prevent human trafficking in their community. Estela and her Rotary partners are supporting basic human rights and safety of children in Guadalajara, Netherlands, and beyond.  

In honor of  Rotary's peace month, we invite you to celebrate by giving for peace!

The RAGFP empowers peace leaders around the world to focus on peace action by connecting, convening and collaborating for sustainable positive peace. Our resources and support are vital for the wheel of peace to continue to turn. Your generous contributions provide the momentum behind the Rotarian wheel of peace to improve the lives of all humanity. Thank you for helping the RAGFP push the wheel of peace forward. We are advancing and supporting Global Grants for peace. Our top priority is to provide every peacebuilder with the resources they need to create successful peace projects, which is why we will continue raising funds for the RAGFP’s many positive peace initiatives. This fund allows our members with the platform to unite and Wage Peace around the world. 

Show your love today and make a gift to champion peacebuilders on their mission for peace.

CELEBRATE PEACE MONTH: Donate to the RAGFP
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