Make Dreams Real Rotary International President-elect Dong Kurn Lee addressed incoming
district governors in January at the 2008 International Assembly, urging them to
use their resources to help curb child mortality.
Lee said he was in disbelief
when he learned that 30,000 children under the age of five die every day from
preventable diseases such as pneumonia, measles, and malaria. Children die not
because nobody can help them, but because too often, nobody does. But you and I,
here in this room, are Rotarians, and helping is what we do best," he said,
adding that "our job is to Make Dreams Real for children. If every one of us
does this, at the end of our year, we will all have achieved something
wonderful."
RI President-elect Dong Kurn Lee sat down with Vince Aversano, editor in chief
of The Rotarian, to talk about how he plans to tackle his year in office as RI’s
first Korean president. Here is a peek at the interview (full story appeared in
the March 2008 issue of The Rotarian).
[Q] President-elect Lee, what would you hope to accomplish next year as
president?
[A] I would like to see progress made in polio, both in terms of meeting
the Gates [Foundation] challenge grant and in reducing the number of
polio-endemic countries. I would also like to see child mortality, the terrible
tragedy of preventable deaths of children, become something that every Rotarian
is aware of. Every day, 30,000 children under the age of five die, most of them
from preventable causes like measles, malaria, and pneumonia. I want people to
realize that every day, a disaster of this size is happening. But it is also
important to remember how much we have already done, and how far we have come.
Children do not die of smallpox anymore, and soon they will not have polio. With
the challenge grant from the Gates Foundation, we have a real chance of ending
polio completely in the next few years. I see the work of eradicating polio as a
key part of my focus on child mortality.
Click on the "play" icon (4) to watch Lee's speech:
Many of the projects that Rotarians are already involved in, in the areas of
water, health and hunger, and literacy, already save the lives of countless
children every year. I believe that by focusing our efforts on decreasing child
mortality through work in these three emphases, we will be able to make a real
difference in the number of children who survive to adulthood.
[Q] What image of Rotary should be projected today? Should the emphasis
be on business networking potential or on humanitarian projects?
[A] I do not think it is a choice between one and the other. Rotary has
to be seen as a whole. Rotary was founded as a business networking tool, and
service came after that. Service is now our primary focus, but that does not
mean Rotary’s role in business should be minimized. Rotarians should be in
Rotary because they want to give, but we can and should also acknowledge the
many benefits to Rotary membership.
[Q] Why do you feel the Rotary Youth Exchange program is so important?
[A] It helps young people comprehend the world better. For young people,
especially when they are living with host families, it is a kind of experience —
an immersion experience — that cannot be duplicated. It brings rewards that are
lifelong and benefits that reach far beyond that one individual.
When I was a young man, I spent two years in California. I was a student, and I
also worked as a busboy on Fisherman’s Wharf in San Francisco. You could not
imagine anything more different from my home village in Korea. Everyone was
different, everything was different — the food, the people, the language. It
completely changed how I saw the world, and it formed who I became in later
life. I think I would still have joined Rotary, but I would not have understood
it as well.
[Q] What inspired your choice of Make Dreams Real as the RI theme?
Part of why Rotary is so exciting for me is that we are able to do more through
Rotary than we could do alone. We can do more as a club than we could as an
individual, we can do more as a district than we could do as a club, and when
you look at all of global Rotary, you can really dream big dreams. No one
individual or even one government, no matter how powerful, could have done what
we have done in polio eradication. In this year, my dream is that together we
will be able to save the lives of children. That is my own dream. Part of that
dream is knowing that children will be able to survive, to grow up healthy, to
have better chances, to be able to see their own dreams become real in their
lives.