Rotary projects around the globe April 2025

Rotary projects around the globe April 2025

Ecuador: Pioneering Integrated Health Screenings

Recognizing the intricate link between renal disease and eye problems, the Rotary Club of Quito Luz de América — “light of America” — is conducting free medical and eye screenings for individuals with chronic kidney disease. Common risk factors like high blood pressure and diabetes can damage delicate blood vessels in the eyes, leading to preventable vision loss and other complications.

Most recently, ten dedicated club members joined health experts in November to offer comprehensive examinations for 100 people at the Teodoro Maldonado Carbo Hospital in Guayaquil. With support from Interactors, the effort was staffed by a general practitioner, a gynecologist, and a project leader trained in optometry. “To conclude the day, we hosted an artistic show to bring joy and hope,” shares past club president Olga Camacho. This initiative highlights a critical global health issue, as chronic kidney disease affects approximately 10% of the world’s population, making such targeted interventions vital.

The Power of Local Collaboration

This project exemplifies how Rotarians leverage local medical expertise to address specific community needs. By focusing on an often-overlooked comorbidity, the club provides a model for holistic care that other organizations might emulate, turning a standard screening into a community-building event filled with compassion and support.

Bermuda: Youth-Led Environmental Stewardship

In a vibrant display of intergenerational service, Girl Scouts joined their parents and Rotarians from the Rotary Club of Hamilton for a beach restoration project along Bailey’s Bay in Hamilton Parish. The team collected over 1,000 pieces of microplastics, along with tin cans, paper, and larger debris, directly protecting the fragile mangrove ecosystems that dot Bermuda’s 75-mile coastline.

Troop leader Cathy Bassett, also president of the Hamilton Rotary Club, notes that the girls, aged 7 to 10, are actively studying mangrove preservation. These shrubs and trees, covering about 51 acres in Bermuda, are biodiversity hotspots that stabilize shorelines. The scouts have even conducted geographical studies on sand to understand what gives the island’s beaches their distinctive pink color, blending education with hands-on conservation.

Cultivating Future Conservationists

This project goes beyond cleanup; it’s about instilling environmental values in young minds. By engaging children in real-world science and service, Rotary is helping cultivate a new generation of eco-conscious leaders who understand their role in preserving natural wonders.

England: Transforming Tradition into Sustainable Charity

The Rotary Club of Darlington has ingeniously turned a post-holiday tradition into a major fundraising engine, raising nearly $160,000 over 14 years. Each January, more than 70 Rotarians and friends collect around 18,000 discarded Christmas trees, which are chipped and sold to a biomass processor to generate electricity.

Campaign leader David Hayward describes the project as a fun social occasion as much as a service endeavor. “Everything is loaned free from local supporters,” he says, including vans, a tree surgeon, and hundreds of pies to fuel volunteers. Teams brave snow and ice over two days, collecting donations per pickup. The funds raised provide crucial support for a local hospice and other charities, proving that community spirit can power both homes and hearts.

Netherlands: A Literary Cycle of Giving

The Rotary Club of Venlo-Maas en Peel demonstrates remarkable fundraising prowess with its annual sale of used books, puzzles, and other items. Over three days in January, the event generated a record $75,000, all directed to the club’s charitable foundation, says Peter Elbers, governor-elect of District 1550.

This fair is the culmination of a year’s work, with about 140 volunteers sorting and categorizing roughly 450,000 books in donated warehouse space. Unsold books are pulped for recycling, and Elbers notes a beautiful cycle: “Some people come every year to buy a few bags full of books and return them as a gift a year later.” This model not only funds good works but also promotes a circular, environmentally friendly economy.

The Architecture of a Fundraising Phenomenon

What makes this project so successful is its deep integration into community habits. It’s more than a sale; it’s a cultural event that bookworms anticipate, creating a self-sustaining loop of donation, purchase, and redonation that maximizes impact while minimizing waste.

Vietnam: Delivering Warmth to the Highlands

When a primary school teacher in Vietnam’s highlands revealed that many students’ families struggled to afford warm clothing, the Rotaract Club of One Million Lives Saigon sprang into action. In December, Rotaractors delivered 1,000 garments—including coats, shoes, gloves, and scarves—to Indigenous ethnic minority villages in Dak Lak province, over 150 miles from their base in Ho Chi Minh City.

Club president Thi Duong emphasizes their commitment: “Despite the challenging journey, we are dedicated to improving their living conditions.” The donation, accompanied by food staples, reached over 100 adults and children. This project underscores how Rotary’s network can bridge urban and remote communities, addressing basic needs with empathy and efficiency.

These diverse initiatives from April 2025 illustrate Rotary’s adaptive, grassroots approach to global service. From health care in Ecuador to environmentalism in Bermuda, each project is tailored to local contexts yet united by a common thread: innovative problem-solving fueled by volunteer passion. As Rotary continues to expand its reach—even through channels like its new WhatsApp updates—these stories remind us that meaningful change often starts with a simple act of seeing a need and daring to meet it, one community at a time.