Rotary China District Assembly in Beijing

The 2013 District Assembly was held on March 23 in the Marriott Courtyard. It was a full day event, starting from 8:30 to 16:00. It is also a President Elect Training Session (PETS) for the incoming club officers and new members that would like to know more about our district and Rotary. The assembly also contained training for Rotary Future Vision, a new funding policy that will replace the current Matching Grant soon. The 2013 District Assembly is a handover from Y.K. Cheng to new District Governor Randal Eastman. Randal will be our first District Governor that is based in China.


Pictured are the speakers Y.K. Cheng, Randal Eastman, David Van Mierendonk (President of our Beijing Club) and Pradeep Kumar.
Gilbert is a member of the Rotary Club of Beijing since many years.

The Rotaract Club of Beijing in action

In Beijing we only have one Rotary Club, due to Chinese restrictions. Also, we are not allowed to have Chinese passport holders as members of Rotary.
Under the umbrella of the Rotary Club of Beijing, we also have the “young generation”: Interact, up to 18 years old (established in Dulwich College), and Rotaract, the 18 to under 30 group.
Rotaracters are mostly young professionals (trying to make it) and students. An interesting mix of young people from different corners of the world, USA, Peru, Iceland, Germany, Thailand, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Czech Republic, … We also welcome local Chinese volunteers as friends of Rotaract and some have been helping us greatly.
I am the liaison person between Rotary and Rotaract, a role I love because our Rotaracters are so dynamic and full of ideas. Sometimes I wonder how they manage to do all the activities. I have been a member of Rotary in Beijing since many years.
We mostly meet on Monday evening 8 pm in Brussels Restaurant, in Sanlitun.
Last week on 11 March we had the President of our Rotary Club coming over to talk about his colorful life and career, and how he landed in Beijing. David Van Mierendonk is a U.S. citizen, from Brooklyn, as he loves to stress. Our present Rotaract president is, by coincidence, also from the USA: Ian Curtiss.


We all loved David’s talk and many people tuned up.
For more info on Rotaract in Beijing: http://www.rotaractbeijing.org/

Domestic violence in China: still a problem

A Beijing district court granted Kim Lee, the American wife of Crazy English founder Li Yang 12 million yuan of her husband’s assets in a divorce triggered by domestic violence. The decision comes after a lot of media attention and also amidst a growing awareness that women are mostly left defenseless in the case of domestic violence.
I just hope this will trigger better treatment of domestic violence in China, not only for a “foreign” spouse. Right now, neither law nor police are of much help for abused women. Domestic violence is regarded an “internal family matter”. It leads to horrible situations and if the wife, in total desperation, fights back or kills the abusive husband, she ends up being blamed; right now a women is on death row in such a case, generating wide condemnation. Big shame on Chinese men, on the law, on the police. It is not as bad as in India but a lot needs to be done.
In Beijing the Rotary Club of Beijing supports an NGO that has a call center to help women in distress. – the demand on the call center is so great it cannot attend to all the calls. For the Maple Counseling Hotline Project (part of the Maple Women’s Psychology Counseling Center), our Rotary Club contributed in its fiscal year 2012/2013 RMB 150,000 for the project.
See more on the court case:
‘Crazy English’ guru’s wife Kim Lee granted 12m yuan in divorce, by Mimi Lau, SCMP, on 4 February 2013
http://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/1142768/crazy-english-gurus-wife-granted-12m-yuan-divorce

Our successfull 2012 Chistmas Rotary Bazaar

This year, for the first time (as far as I remember at least), the Rotary Club of Beijing organized its annual Christmas Bazaar in the Kempinski Hotel, Saturday and Sunday 24 and 25 November. All tables were sold out, not a small feat because there are so many competing bazaars at that time of the year.
I took care of our Rotaracters (or maybe they took care of me?), they were a great help to assist in a number of tasks and especially being in charge of the garage sales. I was there for the two full days, a bit tiring but a great experience. I think financial results were the best ever. It was overall a lot of team work and many Rotarians and volunteers contributed to make this a success. So, I prefer not to mention any names. Great many thanks to all and I feel very proud and lucky to work with our Rotaract Club.
It was mostly full house and as soon the Bazaar was open in the morning, people rushed in. I think we had something like close to 3,000 visitors. Many families brought their kids. Several choirs came to sing and attracted a lot of attention. There was also a special and separate kids corner.
As usual I ended up buying more than I planned and getting home with that all on my little bike was a real adventure (still don’t know how I managed!).
I hope all vendors were satisfied and will return next year.


Here some of the hundreds of pictures we took, we being Mena, our professional photographer Mr. Zhang, and myself. I made my personal choice…

Rotary Club of Beijing Brings Gift of Life to Hebei Province

On 18 December 2012, in Kempinski Hotel, our Rotary Club held a small ceremony. See further down the details according to the press release. This entry was updated 6 Jan. with more pictures.
Gilbert acted as the MC. Speeches were given by:
Mr. David van Meerendonk, President RCB, Mr. Gary Huang, President Nominee, Rotary International (who flew over for the occasion!), Dr. Jiang Rencai, Daimler AG, Mr. An, Party Secretary, Hebei Children’s Hospital and Ms. Piper Tseng, Foundation Chair, RCB.
See my pics of the event

Mobile clinic to save hundreds of children with congenital heart disease

The Rotary Club of Beijing (RCB) today announced the donation of a US$112,500 (or RMB 712,000) medical van to a children’s hospital in China’s Hebei Province which will detect and prevent congenital heart disease in children, educate the community about the problem, and facilitate timely surgery to save young lives.
“The donation is a milestone in the decade-long efforts of the Rotary Club of Beijing to save the lives of Chinese children with heart disease,” said Rotarian Ms. Piper Tseng, Chairwoman of the club’s Rotary Foundation Committee, which has coordinated the project known as “Gift of Life” (“GOL”), in Beijing.
This is the second medical van donated to a Chinese provincial hospital by the Beijing club, which has previously donated one in Henan Province. The medical vans are designed to tour rural areas with ultrasound equipment and a medical team, to conduct medical examinations and scans to detect heart defects among youngsters and to educate mothers to spot symptoms in their infants and to avoid bad pre-natal habits during pregnancy.
“These children are all suffering from a life threatening sickness – congenital heart disease – which if left untreated will mean they have very short lives. Their families cannot afford to send them to hospital, so we are helping to do what we can,” said Ms. Tseng.
The Beijing club spearheaded the latest project, coordinating support from key partners including the China Song Ching Ling Foundation (“CSCLF”), General Electric and Daimler AG, along with the Hebei Children’s Hospital in Shijiazhuang, the capital of Hebei Province. Important contributions were also collected from Rotary clubs in Taiwan, Hong Kong and the United States.
The GOL is a global program designed by US-based Rotary International for its 34,000 clubs and 1.2 million members around the world to participate in. The Beijing club has had an active GOL program since 2001 and has provided 320 life-saving surgeries for Chinese children, a medical bus to the Zhengzhou No. 7 Hospital in Henan Province, central China, in addition to raising substantial matching grants and private donations.
Official data shows China has a high incidence of birth defects and that they are on the rise. Birth defects grew from 87.7children for every 10,000 children born in 1996 to 149.9in 2010, a dramatic 70.9% jump. Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) ranks as the leading birth defect and surged by 23.25% in the period 2003-2007. About 260,000 children, or 32.7 /10,000 are born with CHD each year. [Ref: “Women and children Health Report”, Sept 2011, released by PRC government]
CHD is one of the deadliest birth defects. About 300,000 children died before the age 5 in 2010, a 16.4% mortality rate and the 5th-highest in the world after India, Nigeria, Congo and Pakistan. CHD cases account for most of those early deaths.
A low rate of surgery treatment accounts for the high mortality rate each year in CHD children. Of the 260,000 children born with CHD each year, only about 70,000, or 23%, reach the operating room. The situation is worst in rural areas, where the share of the medical fees that a family must fork out is a major deterrent against seeking treatment. Most hospitals capable of delivering CHD surgery are overly concentrated in big cities like Beijing and Shanghai and a long way from rural areas.
The GOL medical vans enable cardiologists and physicians to travel to rural areas to train grassroots doctors and to screen children with CHD and to provide better pre-natal care. They then provide surgery opportunities to children in need by connecting them with surgery funds available through charities such as Rotary or through government CHD surgery subsidies that they otherwise might not learn about.
Hebei Province has one of China’s highest birth defect rates. An estimated 8,000 children are born there every year with CHD, and 3,000 of those are considered critical cases. Less than half of the affected children receive surgery. Early detection and surgery in Hebei can help save their lives. The Hebei Children’s Hospital has helped save the lives of 200 GOL patients since 2001.

About Rotary International (RI)
RI is a global voluntary organization of business and professional leaders that provides humanitarian service, encourages high ethical standards in all vocations and helps build goodwill and peace in the world. Over 1.2 million Rotarians belong to more than 33,000 Rotary clubs in over 200 countries.

About the Rotary Club of Beijing (RCB)
The RCB is a full-fledged Rotary club with 70 members from a spectrum of business and vocational sectors within the foreign community from more than 20 different nations. We conduct regular fellowship gatherings and fundraising activities. We have contributed funds and our time to a variety of social and sustainable projects in poverty alleviation, health, education and the environment.