Taking Rotary into the next generation

Members of the recently chartered Rotary Club of Plaza Matriz in Montevideo, Uruguay. Photo courtesy of Erin Mills

Members of the recently chartered Rotary Club of Plaza Matriz in Montevideo, Uruguay. Photo courtesy of Erin Mills

By Erin Mills, Rotary Scholar and charter member of the Rotary Club of Plaza Matriz in Montevideo, Uruguay

A little over six years ago, I packed my luggage and boarded a plane for Montevideo, Uruguay, as an  Ambassadorial Scholar from Arizona, USA, to that tiny corner of the world I now call home. It’s where I teach future English language educators at the University of Montevideo, where I teach middle school children from around the world at the American International School, and where 24 young professionals and I are taking Rotary into the next generation. 

On a breezy, Saturday afternoon in March, surrounded by familiar faces and scrumptious Uruguayan masitas (small cakes), those young professionals and I began hashing out the dos and don’ts of starting a Rotary club. Many of us had been members of Rotaract (Rotary’s program for people ages 18-30), or even Rotary clubs, but we couldn’t find a club that fit until we decided to start our own.

We didn’t have a place to meet, so we rotated meetings among the houses of the founding members (reminiscent of Paul Harris and the founders of Rotary who rotated offices before they had an actual meeting space). With the support of our sponsor club, the Rotary club of Montevideo, we received our official charter about three weeks ago and became the Rotary Club of Plaza Matriz in Montevideo, Uruguay.

The energy and enthusiasm this club has for Rotary and its mission is producing quite the momentum for change in our local and global community. We are already involved in supporting a local non-profit that works with Leukemia patients. Other members are putting together workshops to get Rotary members up to speed on how to use social networks to their advantage.

We are also very excited about organizing a fundraising event we coordinated as Rotaract members. The event is an Oscars for Rotary, we call it, “La Rueda de Oro” or the “Golden Wheel.” Clubs that enter have the chance to win a Golden Wheel in categories such as best outreach program for new members, best service project, etc. Even clubs from other countries have a chance to enter the international category. It’s a great way to simultaneously raise money for a good cause and create awareness about the projects that the various Rotary clubs in Uruguay, and around the world, are carrying out.

We’re a new club, in a small country of three million people, but we’re here to make a change and carry Rotary’s mission of service into the next generation.

4 thoughts on “Taking Rotary into the next generation

  1. Pingback: The benefits of multi-generational membership | Regional Leader Blog

  2. Para mi Rotary, es un modo de vida, que brinda especialmente la oportunidad de vida y de muchos experiencias a la juventud, eso me llena de orgullo y satisfacción, tuve la oportunidad de Presidir el Comité de Intercambio de Jóvenes y enviar a cuatro jóvenes de intercambio y en mi periodo de Presidente, tuve la oportunidad de crear el Rotaract valencia Industrial, en mi club Rotary Valencia Industrial. Los felicito por tan inolvidables experiencias. Saludos y a la orden en Valencia-Venezuela.

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  3. Pingback: Taking Rotary into the next generation | Warsaw Rotary , Club 3393, District 6540

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