“Money alone does little good,
Individual service is helpless without money.
The two together can be God-sent to civilization”.
-Arch C Klump, Founder, the Rotary Foundation
Having joined Rotary in the year 1988, it took nine years for me to join the club’s board
and contribute something to the society. It took another three years for me to lead the
club and take it to some heights in terms of community service projects. I could
understand the real spirit of Rotary and its motto, Service Above Self, only when I
started getting involved in implementing the matching grant (MG) projects (since 2014,
called ‘Global Grant’), mainly in the area of Avoidable Blindness (AB). As I had
mentioned in one of the earlier episodes, any position that one occupies in Rotary is
voluntary. It is the prerogative of the District Governor to invite Past Presidents of the
clubs for some position or the other at the district level depending on their interests.
Though I had held the position of Chairman/Director of the District AB Committee on
many occasions after being the President of the club during 2000–01, I had also held
several district positions other than heading the AB Committee.

In the Rotary year 2003–04, District Governor
Prabhashankar had requested me to be the Chairman of
the District Committee on International Services. That
year I organised a seminar to coincide with the visit of
Gabriel Minder from Geneva and that resulted in our
district doing a Matching Grant project. During 2004–05,
Governor Yogananda requested me to be the Chairman
of the Membership Development Committee and Co-Chairman of Polio Surgery
Committee. We raised funds for fifty polio corrective surgeries, again through an MG
project in partnership with a club from UK, apart from helping the clubs to grow their
membership and improve retention. During 2006–07 my home club hosted the Presidents Elect Training Seminar for which I
was the Chairman. In April 2006, Hema and I went on a three-week tour of Europe
covering Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Spain, and Switzerland to
celebrate (belatedly) our Silver jubilee wedding anniversary. I used this opportunity to
give talks in three Rotary clubs in three different countries – Rotary Sigmaringen,
Germany; Rotary Ferney-Voltaire, France; and Rotary Senhora-da-hora, Portugal. This
helped in developing and subsequently launching one more MG AB project, Nayana
Jyothi, to support 2,000 cataract surgeries and 1,000 spectacles for children.

During 2007–08, District Governor Rajendra Rai had requested me to
be the Director of Community Service. The theme of that Rotary year
being Rotary Shares, he suggested that I form as many committees as
required to implement service projects that would benefit the
community. Having formed a record thirty-two committees, I
published a Compendium of Service Projects, giving details of the
committees, chairpersons, and members with their communication
details, goals for each of the committees, and award points for the projects
implemented. The book also had a section on Rotary Resources – Medical Professionals
who are Rotarians, NGOs established by Rotarians, and all other relevant details
pertaining to healthcare. The book was released on the occasion of installation of
District Governor and was distributed to all the club Presidents and committee
Chairpersons.
During 2008–09, District Governor U. B. Bhat requested
me to be the Deputy District Trainer to organise District
Training Programs apart from being the Chairman for
the District AB Committee. In association with
Ramkumar Seshu, a professional trainer, I developed
training materials. During October Gabriel and Balazs
again visited South India to review some of the projects
that their club was supporting. I made use of their visit to organise a one-day district AB
seminar and felicitated Gabriel and Balazs for their support to several AB projects.
Based on the suggestion made by Gabriel, our club in association with Globe Eye
Foundation launched Cataract-free RID3190 project in 2009 to ensure backlog of
cataract in the geography of our district is brought down to zero by 2020. I was made
honorary chairman for the project.
During 2009–10, District Governor S. Nagendra requested me to be the Assistant
Governor for five clubs, couple of them requiring constant handholding to stabilize.
During 2009–13 with the support of Ramakrishna Potluri, a member of the newlyformed Rotary Bangalore Lakeside who was working with SAP Labs, we could
undertake 2,500 cataract surgeries and 75 children heart surgeries under Corporate
Social Responsibility (CSR) program of SAP Labs.
During 2012–13, Rotary in India launched Rotary India Literacy Mission under which the
TEACH programme was developed. TEACH is an acronym for
Teacher Support
E-Learning
Adults Literacy
Child Development
Happy School.
During 2013–14 and 2014–15 I was the Chairman for the District Happy Schools
Committee and worked towards its implementation.

During 2013–14 I had also developed a Global Grant
(GG) project with our good friend Jorge Amaral,
partnering again to support 1,500 cataract surgeries
and the project was completed by April 2015. I
immediately followed this with another major AB
project to establish four Vision Centres in rural areas
– Dodballapura, Kanakapura, Jigani, and Maddur to
provide access to primary eye-care for rural people.
This project also supported treatment of 2,700+ cataract surgeries, 100+ paediatric eye
surgeries, and 1,600+ spectacles for children. During the course of implementation,
sometime during June 2018 we had an ophthalmologist from Turkey visiting us for four
days to audit the project on behalf of the Rotary Foundation (TRF). Even Jorge Amaral,
primary contact representing our international partner club visited the project sites
during March 2019 and spent five days. He was very much impressed.

During March 2017 Dr. Ravishankar, a wellestablished vitreo-retina surgeon specialised in
paediatric eye surgeries from Mysore, who had
volunteered his professional services on several
occasions outside India, requested me to put
together a proposal to support 50 eye surgeries of
poor Gambian children taking into account travel
cost of three ophthalmologists and an anaesthetist
and cost of consumables. While he put together a team of three ophthalmologists and
an anaesthetist who would volunteer their services and organised required
consumables, I helped him in raising funds to meet the travel cost of the medical team.
Further I had joined the medical team as a volunteer to provide logistics support apart
from delivering talks at two Rotary clubs in Gambia. I shared this experience through an
article in the Rotary Regional Magazine, Rotary News. I took up GG project for
establishing Vision Centres and treatment of eye-related issues of poor patients and Gambian children eye surgeries project to commemorate centenary year of TRF, just as
I took up the Cambodia AB project involving six Rotary districts across five countries to
commemorate centenary year of Rotary.
2017–18 Governor Asha had requested me to conduct a mega eye screening camp for
government school children during the first week of the Rotary year immediately after
her installation as District Governor. It took almost three months of planning and we
had to motivate over thirty clubs to support this mega camp. On a single day, 4
th
July
2017, between 10 am and 4 pm, over 31,000 children studying in 76 schools, spread
across seven revenue districts of Karnataka were screened for refraction problem with
the support of 13 eye hospitals. It turns out that it was a world record of sorts, because
the maximum number of eye screening done in a day as per Guinness is 25,355 on 4
th
April 2015 at Karur.
Since 2018 I decided only to guide clubs which are interested in developing and
implementing GG projects in the area of AB. I have guided two clubs so far and they
have successfully obtained the grants from TRF. This year being Centenary year of
Indian Rotary, I launched Rotary Vision 2020 project in association with government of
Karnataka and a Multi-national company manufacturing lenses to screen 100,000
school children of government schools and provide spectacle to the needy.
Based on my experience of implementing AB service projects and dealing with various
stakeholders – government, NGOs, Eye hospitals, corporate and technology driven
start-ups in eye-care sector, Dr. Ramesh and Dr. Barnabas, my friends from academia,
authoured along with me a few case studies and research papers. They have been
presented / published at the national / international level conferences / journals. AB
projects have become so synonymous with me during the last couple of decades, that
many people (mainly in Rotary), even today, mistake me to be an ophthalmologist!
March 01, 2020 | Ravi 34
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