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ROTARACT BEOGRAD-CENTAR HISTORY
Rotaract Club Beograd-Centar was founded in 1999. The founders of this club are also the founders of the first Rotaract Club in Serbia in 1995, and in 2004, the same six people founded the first Rotary Club in Serbia that consisted of former Rotaract members.
Rotaract Club Beograd-Centar is a club with a strong structure (currently with 27 members and 5 guests). It is a place where many excellent, striving young people from our city are gathered around the idea of Rotaract.
Our meetings are held every Wednesday at 9 PM at the hotel Le Petit Piaf in Skadarska Street in Belgrade. The owner of this hotel is a member of Rotary Club Beograd-International, so we feel very much at home there. Our Board has nine members:
President
- Executive Vice President
- Immediate Past President
- Secretary
- Treasurer
- Service: club, international, professional, community
Gathered in a very positive and friendly atmosphere, through interesting meetings and various get-togethers, we try to improve ourselves, and to improve and help society in general as well.
Our past projects represent our club in the best light, and at the same time they are a stepping stone for the time ahead of us.
For more information about the Rotary organization, please visit:
www.rotary.org
www.rotaract.org
Yours truly
Rotaract Club Beograd-Centar
ROTARACT HISTORY – INTERNATIONAL
Rotaract, Rotary International's service club program for
young adults ages 18-30, was officially inaugurated during
January 1968 under RI President Luther Hodges. On 13 March
1968, the Rotaract Club of the University of North Carolina,
sponsored by the Rotary Club of North Charlotte, North Carolina,
USA, was the first Rotaract club to receive its official charter.
Although this club is recognized as the first Rotaract club,
Rotarians have been sponsoring similar organizations for young
adults since the early 1920s.
The earliest known predecessors to Rotaract, Twenty-Thirty
clubs, were first sponsored by the Rotary Club of Sacramento,
California, USA. The clubs were based on the principles and
goals of their sponsoring Rotary clubs, and membership was
open to young professionals and university students. The first
meeting of a Twenty-Thirty club was held on 19 December 1922.
At one point, the movement claimed as many as 125 clubs under
the sponsorship of California Rotary clubs, and published
a monthly magazine.
In 1927, Round Table clubs were founded in Great Britain
and Ireland. Membership in Round Table clubs was open to young
men ages 18 to 40, and by 1935, there more than 90 Round Table
clubs existed. In November 1930, the first Apex club was formed
in Geelong, Australia. Apex clubs grew rapidly, expanding
to more than 20 clubs in just a few years. These clubs were
sponsored by Rotary clubs, and were open to professionals
and students between the ages of 18 and 35.
Similar Rotary club-sponsored groups continued to spring
up simultaneously and independently around the globe. Unisserve
clubs in India, Orbis clubs in South America, Rotors clubs
in South Africa, Paul Harris Circles in Europe, and Quadrant
clubs in the United States are some of the best-known examples.
Eventually, these clubs would provide the base for the future
growth of Rotaract as the clubs adopted new names under the
Rotaract program.
Perhaps the greatest impetus for the creation of the Rotaract
program came from Rotary's youth service club for secondary
school students, Interact clubs. Established in 1962, the
Interact program enjoyed immediate success. However, since
membership was only open to students in secondary schools,
graduated Interactors and Rotarians were soon looking for
ways to extend their relationship. Several proposals were
brought before the RI Board of Directors to allow membership
in Interact clubs to extend for a few years after graduation.
Instead of extending the age requirements for Interact, the
Board decided to study the feasibility of creating a new service
club program for young adults at the university and young
professional level.
The decision to adopt the Rotaract program came at a time
when student protests worldwide were of growing concern to
Rotarians. The Rotaract program was adopted not only as means
of keeping former Interactors within the Rotary family, but
as a means of channeling the energies of young adults into
positive activities that could benefit their communities.
A special committee was convened to design the new service
club program for young adults during 1966. After polling students
at the University of Houston, Texas, USA, the committee decided
that "Rotaract" would be the best name for the program - a combination
of the words "Rotary" and "action".
Coincidentally,
the service club at the University of North Carolina had already
adopted the name in 1966, but they coined it as a combination
of the names "Rotary" and "Interact."
The committee also decided that young women should be allowed
to join on equal standing with male members at the discretion
of the sponsoring Rotary club.
Within a day of the certification of the Rotaract Club of
the University of North Carolina, the Rotaract Club of the
University of La Salle was chartered in Tacubaya, Mexico.
The Rotaract Clubs of Florence, Italy, Gaston College, North
Carolina, and Secunderabad, India, were all certified in the
following weeks. The young adults' clubs that had already
existed in many regions fueled the rapid growth of Rotaract
for the first few years.
By 1981, Rotaract was so popular that Rotaractors in South
Africa decided to host the first INTEROTA conference, an international
meeting for all Rotaractors. Subsequent conferences have been
held every three years. To date, INTEROTA conferences have
been hosted by Rotaractors in South Africa, Australia, England,
Turkey, Mexico, Brazil, and Germany. International meetings for Rotaractors
are also held every year at the Rotaract Preconvention Meeting
that precedes Rotary's annual convention. The first such meeting
was held in Seoul, Korea, in 1989, with more than 450 Rotaractors
in attendance.
Several developments in the early 1990s helped strengthen
the Rotaract movement. In February 1991, the first Rotaract
club in Eastern Europe was chartered in Budapest, Hungary,
with the help of Austrian Rotaractors. Ties with Eastern Europe
were further strengthened when the same Austrian Rotaractors
helped charter the Rotaract Club of Prague in what was then
Czechoslovakia later in 1991. In March 1992, the RI Board
established World Rotaract Week, which is celebrated annually
during the week of 13 March to commemorate the chartering
of the first Rotaract club. During World Rotaract Week, Rotaractors
attend meetings with their sponsoring Rotary clubs, undertake
joint service projects, and speak with clubs that do not sponsor
Rotaract clubs about the benefits of the program.
Since 1968, Rotaractors have continually shown that they
can be an innovative and positive force for change in their
communities. Service activities commonly undertaken include
projects to improve the environment, visits with the elderly
or disabled, blood or organ donation campaigns, and aid to
developing countries. One example of the ingenuity employed
by Rotaractors is a project undertaken by the Rotaract Clubs
of Heemstede and Hillegom-Lissee, the Netherlands, in 1987.
In order to raise funds for Polio Plus, Rotaractors from the
two clubs designed an amphibious cycle that would cross the
English Channel under the power of 36 Rotaractors. The campaign
raised US$210,000 for Polio Plus and earned the Rotaractors
a place in the Guinness Book of World Records for their speedy
crossing.
Today, Rotaract continues to experience phenomenal growth.
There are currently more than 7,600 Rotaract clubs in more
than 158 countries, with an estimated membership of more than
176,000 Rotaractors. As the program continues to grow, Rotaractors
repeatedly show that they are prepared for "Fellowship
Through Service."
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