Rotary honors 6 who are changing the world
Innovation was the theme at Rotary Day at the United Nations on 10 November. Nearly aMore than a thousand Rotary leaders, members, and guests from around the world met in Nairobi, Kenya, to hear about creative solutions to challenging world problems.
The annual event, held at the only UN headquarters in Africa, recognizes Rotaryâs long-standing special relationship with the United Nations . UN officials and humanitarian experts inspired participants to find innovative strategies for addressing humanitarian needs both locally and globally.
Six Rotaract and Rotary members age 35 or under were also honored as Rotary People of Action: Young Innovators. All of these leaders spoke about how they used ingenuity to launch efforts that brought about measurable and lasting results.
General sessions and workshops covered the UN Sustainable Development Goals, the technology revolution, and young peopleâs role in creating change. A special session on the environment emphasized the importance of sustainable development and suggested concrete actions that people of all generations can take to build a clean and healthy future.
For the first time, the event also featured an Innovation Fair where Rotary clubs, businesses, and other organizations exhibited projects and cutting-edge technology designed to address humanitarian challenges.
Keynote speakers included RI President Barry Rassin, who is a member of the Rotary Club of East Nassau, New Providence, Bahamas, and Sushil Kumar Gupta, Rotary International president-nominee and a member of the Rotary Club of Delhi Midwest, Delhi, India.
Rassin said the Innovation Fair inspired him to pair Rotaryâs older generationsâ resources and experience with the energy and ideas of young people.
âWe want to take you on as equals, as colleagues,â Rassin told the young audience members. âYou bring to the table your ideas, your ambitions, your perspective on the worldâs problems. We help you to enlarge your horizons, to think big, and to make your innovations practical.âÂ
He added, âYouth innovators and Rotary can make the impossible possible.â
With more young people in the world today than ever before â more than 50 percent of the population is under age 30Â Â â itâs imperative for them to harness their talents, said Hanna S. Tetteh, director-general of the United Nations Office at Nairobi.Â
âFor a more peaceful and more sustainable world for all, we need the active participation and leadership of young people,â said Tetteh. âIâm grateful Rotary is representing that here today.â
 Watch a video of Rotary UN Day 2018
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