Rotary International Theme 2025-2026


THE ROWEL

Rotary Club of Durham
 

Rotary International President:

Francesco Arezzo

Rotary District 5160 Governor:

Joy Alaidarous

Durham Rotary President:

Tom Knowles

_____________

Editor: Phil Price

Publisher:  Jen Liu

 

February 3, 2026



 

Crab Feed 2026

Will be held on
Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026





The Meeting Opening

President Tom Knowles called the meeting to order at the Butte Creek Country Club..

Tom asked Steve Plume to lead the pledge, which he did.

Tom read an inspirational poem instead of the invocation.

He then asked Larry Bradley then lead us in singing a song.  He decided that since baseball season was getting started with games beginning with the National Anthem, we should sing that.  So that is what he led us in singing.


2026                                       Calendar for Durham Rotary



F
e
b
r
u
a
r
y
1 2 3
Tina Wolfe on CASA
(Peggi Kohler)
4 5 6 7
8 9 10
Board Meeting at 5:30 PM via ZOOM
11 12 13 14
15
16 17
This meeting will commence at 5:30 PM. Eric Hoiland will present the program at Rancho Esquon, 1609 Adams Ranch Road, Durham
18 19 20 21
22 23
24
Crab Feed Planning Meeting at TBA
25 26 27 28

M
a
r
c
h
1 2 3
Interact Club Takeover
(Diana Selland & Jessica Thorpe)
4 5
6
7
8
9
10
No Meeting
11
12
13
14
15 16
17
Rice Farming
(Tom Knowles)
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
No Meeting
25 26 27 28
29 30
31





FUTURE MEETINGS: Meetings will be at the location noted, at 6:00 pm.

February 10th:  Board Meeting at 5:30 PM via ZOOM

February 17th:  This meeting will commence at 5:30 pm.  Eric Hoiland will present the program at Ranco Esquon, 1609 Adams Ranch Road, Durham

March 3rd:  Jessica & Diana-Interact Takeover

March 24th  Tom Knowles will present a program about rice farming at the BCCC.

April 7th:  TBA

April 21st:  Diana and Jessica will present the Student Awards Banquet at the Memorial Hall

Announcements

 

President Tom noted that we had a successful crab feed, but he had no information on whether it was more or less successful that last year.

He then announced that there would be a Board meeting on Tuesday, February 10th at 5:30pm at his home; 9285 Sarah Ann Ct in Durham. Please let him know if you will not be able to attend.

Peggi announced that she had attended the District workshop on grant writing, and could write a grand application for the sidewalk we are planning.

Introductions

 

We had one visitor.  He was Jose Hernantez from the Sunrise Club.

We also had Ruth Ann McKalip, who was here to present our program for the night.

Recognitions

President Tom asked whether any Rotarian had had a birthday in January or February.  John Bohannon admitted that he would be 56 in February.  He volunteered half that in dollars, which he calculated to be $23.  It was pointed out that there was an error in his math.  He contributed $28.

I then asked why he didn’t’ ask for anniversaries in January and February.  So, he did.  I contributed $50 for my 67th anniversary on January 31st.

The Program

Peggi introduced Ruth Ann McKalip, a CASA volunteer. She spoke about CASA.  CASA is Court Appointed Special Advocates for children.  CASA provides caring advocates for children in foster care, who have been abused or neglected.  In our area it is supported by the Northern Valley Catholic Social Service.  CASA is pretty much nationwide and the supporting entities differ elsewhere.  CASA volunteers go through substantial training and are eventually court appointed to represent and advise one abused child in foster care.  They establish a relationship with the child and listen to the child’s difficulties and desires.  The child has already been removed from his or her parent’s home and placed in foster care. The CASA volunteer appears in court, along with the social worker assigned to the child.  The court listens to the volunteer’s recommendations concerning the child’s welfare, including living arrangements, education and healthcare.

 

Here is the link to the video on YouTube which gives an in depth understanding about the CASA Program: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCV_vzBxtJc

Next Meeting

The next meeting, on February 17th, will begin at 5:30 pm.  It will be at the Rancho Esquon, located at 1609 Adams Ranch Road, in Durham.  The program will be presented by Eric Hoiland.

Must Be Present to Win Drawing:

Larry Bradley drew Glenn Pulliam’s name.  He was not here to win.

Closing

President Tom then closed the meeting.

 

Membership

Bring guests who you think you can interest in becoming a member. We Need More Members! Your dinner and your guest’s dinner will be paid for by the Club.  Also, bring a guest to one of our occasional social gatherings.

President Tom is asking the members to bring in new members this year.

Go to the following Rotary International web site for information on membership development:  https://my.rotary.org/en/learning-reference/learn-topic/membership .  From this website there is access to membership development and other related information.

 

The Rotary Foundation Donations

You can make a difference in this world by helping people in need. Your gift can do some great things, from supplying filters that clean people’s drinking water to empowering local entrepreneurs to grow through business development training.

The Rotary Foundation will use your gift to fund the life-changing work of Rotary members who provide sustainable solutions to their communities’ most pressing needs. But we need help from people like you who will take action and give the gift of Rotary to make these projects possible.

When every Rotarian gives every year, no challenge is too great for us to make a difference. The minimum gift to The Rotary Foundation is $25.00.   An annual $100.00 gift is a sustaining member.  Once your donations accumulate to $1,000 you become a Paul Harris Fellow.

If you have any questions, ask Steve Heithecker.

It is possible to learn more about The Rotary Foundation on the Rotary web site. 

Your gift can be made online or by sending Jessica Thorpe a check made out to The Rotary Foundation to Durham Rotary, P.O. Box 383, Durham, California 95958.

 

 

From District 5160

The District Newsletter has been uploaded to DACdb - to view it there go to the District tab, open the District Bulletin file and look for the pdf file named Rotary District 5160 Newsletter. 

From Rotary International’s News and Features Website

{Note that the proceeding may not be the complete article.  See the complete article on Rotary International’s web page.}

Note that the photos in the original article may not have been reproduced here.

The game changer

Meet your 2026-27 Rotary president, Olayinka Hakeem Babalola

Olayinka “Yinka” Hakeem Babalola is sitting on the wrong side of his desk, staring at the tiny squares on the laptop perched in front of him. He’s just finished speaking on a call with 300 Rotaractors from the African continent and other parts of the world, Rotary’s president-elect explains as he turns down the volume. “They held a celebration for me because I’m a past Rotaractor,” he says. By seeing Babalola, himself once in their shoes, embarking on the highest position in Rotary, who knows how many of the 300 he will inspire. It’s early October, less than two months since the Rotary International Board of Directors selected Babalola to lead Rotary, in a special session in late August after the resignation of RI President-elect Sang Koo Yun, who died shortly after, following months of cancer treatment.


Image credit: Monika Lozinska

It’s only the second trip to Rotary headquarters for Babalola, of the Rotary Club of Trans Amadi in Nigeria, since his selection. His office is nearly empty, void so far of all the gifts Rotary leaders tend to accumulate during their travels as an incoming president.

While he’s new to the position, he has a long history with Rotary, starting as a Rotaractor in 1984and then as a Rotarian in 1994. “One thing is for certain, preparing me for this role are my many years of engaging with Rotary” — over four decades, he says.“Not many people who get to this position have that privilege.”

In that time, he’s served not only as RI vice president and a member of the RI Board of Directors but also as an active leader and participant in RI committees such as the End Polio Now Countdown to History Campaign Committee and the Nigeria PolioPlus Committee. Babalola was a trustee of ShelterBox. His Rotary honors include the Regional Service Award for a Polio-Free World, the Service Above Self Award, and a Rotary Foundation Citation for Meritorious Service. He and his wife, Preba, a member of the Rotary Club of Port Harcourt Passport, are Arch Klumph Society members.

That’s all on top of his professional life. He worked for 25 years in the oil and gas industry, holding senior positions with Shell. He is the founder of two companies: Riviera Technical Services Ltd., an oil and gas infrastructure delivery company, and Lead and Change Consulting, an executive coaching and organizational performance advisory group.

Rotary magazine senior staff writer Diana Schoberg sat down with Babalola to find out more about the president-elect.

He was inspired to join Rotary because of something he saw on TV.

On summer break between his last year of high school and his first year of college, Babalola was hanging out at home watching TV when a well-dressed man on the screen caught his eye. The man was wearing all white, and “his English was something else,” Babalolare calls. Curious, he listened more closely. The man was talking about Rotary. “It was the first time I heard anything about Rotary,” Babalola says. “Likewith most TV interviews, it probably lasted one or two minutes, but he made an impression on me.”

Fast forward to Babalola’s second year at the university, when the school’s public image director, a member of the Rotary Club of Bauchi, approached him with a proposal: Would Babalola like to help organize a Rotaract club at the school? “I still tell people I have no idea why he approached me,” Babalola says. He recalled the well-spoken man in white and asked if the director was somehow connected. It turns out the director knew the man on TV, who was the past district governor. Babalola was sold on the connection and went on to become the Rotaract club’s charter president.

He met his wife at a Rotaract meeting.

After finishing up his university education, Babalola moved to Port Harcourt and joined the community-based Rotaract Club of Trans Amadi. At one event, he recalls noticing a beautiful woman, the president of a university-based club. He pointed her out to a friend and said, “That’s the one.” He was right.

But Yinka and Preba aren’t the only members of their family who have been involved in Rotary. Their oldest daughter was the charter president of the Interact club at her secondary school. She moved to North America for college and today belongs to the Rotary Club of Winnipeg in Manitoba. Another daughter was the president of her university’s Rotaract club.

President-elect Olayinka Hakeem Babalola stands outside Rotary’s headquarters building with Rotary Foundation Trustee Martha Peak Helman and RI Vice President Alain Van de Poel.

Image credit: Monika Lozinska

His nickname is “the game changer.”

Babalola served as district governor in 2011-12 while employed by Shell, a multinational energy company.This was unlike his predecessors, who were either retired or running their own businesses while they held that role. He knew things had to change for him to be successful.

At his first meeting with the assistant governors and committee chairs, he asked them to include what would be the “game changer” in their proposals: how they used to do things, and how their approach would change going forward. “If they have no answer,” he says,“the proposal is thrown away. They need to present it again.

“It occurred to people that this guy actually wants something different,” he continues. “I’m called the game changer, but the ideas that changed the game were not mine.”

He raised $80,000 with a text message.

Part of Babalola’s effort to make changes as district governor involved his use of technology. On 1November, the start of Rotary Foundation Month, he woke up around 3 a.m. and sent a request to a district group on a BlackBerry messaging app asking everyone on the platform to give something to the Foundation that day, no matter how small. Then he went back to sleep. When he woke up a few hours later, he made his own donation and posted the evidence. Within a few hours, the group had raised $80,000. “Usually, you would gather people together, you’d talk to them,and ask for it,” he says. “But with technology, you could ask virtually.”

That year, every club throughout the district gave something to the Foundation. The nearly $1 million raised was, he says, the highest amount ever from a district on the African continent for The Rotary Foundation.

He wishes he had more time to go scuba diving.

Babalola is certified to dive to 30 meters and has done some diving in the Mediterranean, the Red Sea, and the Atlantic. He’s looking forward to someday diving in Hurghada, a resort city on Egypt’s Red Sea coast that’s known for its marine life, iconic wrecks, and high visibility in the water. “The reefs are wonderful,” he says.

He also enjoys other outdoor pursuits including swimming, gardening, and bird-watching. One of the most interesting birds he’s seen is the Ibadan malimbe, a rare songbird with bright red feathers around its head and face that is found only near his hometown.

The 2026-27 presidential message is Create Lasting Impact.

If you need it, here’s a refresher on Rotary’s vision statement: “Together, we see a world where people unite and take action to create lasting change — across the globe, in our communities, and in ourselves.” This Rotary year, Babalola explains, RI has been focusing on that first word, “together,” through the message Unite for Good. In 2026-27, members will tackle the next part of the vision statement: creating change that lasts.

Lasting change across the globe is an easy idea for most Rotary members to understand, he says. “They can give you examples: our polio eradication work, our peace centers, global grants,” he says. “When you talk about lasting change in communities, they know because they do things in their own communities. But each time I’ve been in a gathering of Rotarians and asked them about lasting change in themselves,usually the room goes quiet.”

 

He thinks a key to growing Rotary is realizing the effect it has on you.

While members can and should measure the impact of a project, Babalola wants to see that idea flipped, too. “How has doing all of that impacted you?”

He can clearly see how Rotary has changed his own life. “I had a privileged upbringing — a good education in a place where many did not have that opportunity,” he says. “Rotary grounded me. It pulled me out of my privileged world and put me in touch with the realities of my community.”

Many Rotary members have their own stories about how their membership has changed their lives for the better, how it humbled them or brought them closer to their fellow human beings. Babalola encourages them to share those stories. “If we are going to grow this organization, we must let people understand how membership can make a lasting impact on their own lives,” he says. “That’s one of the things I’m hoping that I can help communicate.”

Rotary made him a diplomat.

As a Rotary director in 2018-20, Babalola represented more than 80 Rotary countries and geographical areas — over a third of the Rotary world — including countries in Africa (where at least 1,000 languages are spoken), the Middle East, and parts of Europe. The zones he represented included politically sensitive areas such as Israel, Lebanon, Ukraine, and Afghanistan. “There are certain skills you end up building,” he says.

For example, at a Rotary institute he convened in Egypt, he received a phone call from a senior government official about a map of Africa used at the event. The map, which he’d found on the internet, showed Western Sahara as a separate country, which Morocco does not recognize. Egypt supports the position of Morocco. “That kind of situation brings a certain awareness straight to you,”he says.

He’s the second president from Africa.

“It means a lot for the people of that continent,” he says. And, he adds, everyone   seems ready to do the work to support him. “I’m used to delivering results. We need to deliver results,” he says. That’s what he’s been preaching at the Rotary institutes he’s attended. “I’ve told them, stop talking about things. Just do it. If it works somewhere, copy it shamelessly. Don’t be afraid to fail— be afraid not to try.”

This story is from the February 2026 issue of Rotary magazine.

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