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Tuesday, Sept. 20 - 5:45 - 7 p.m. - Club Assembly -  Brainstorming and planning session on how our club will follow up on our YP Human Trafficking Summit. Meeting at Milwaukee Athletic Club 

This will be a facilitated conversation to discuss ways that Rotary Club Amigos de Milwaukee After Hours will provide more opportunities to raise awareness of the Human Trafficking issue in the Greater Milwaukee community.  Even if you are not a Rotarian, please come and help us determine ways for us to do more.
 
Why should you be concerned?  Learn more and then join us tomorrow.
 
This was the Summit we hosted on Aug. 22 and the Sept. 20 and 27 meetings will be the next steps!
A Crime Hidden in Plain Sight: Human Trafficking in Milwaukee

By Allison Dikanovic

February 29, 2016

Martha Kuhlman looked down, feeling outside of her body. She saw herself climb into the backseat of a car in a body-hugging dress as a man promised to go get her money. Instead of cash, he returned with a knife in hand. Before tossing her out onto the curb, the man strangled the young woman until she lost consciousness.

Kuhlman is a survivor of human trafficking. Her attacker was just one of many men who purchased sex from her while she was trafficked from age 14 to 19. Kuhlman said that an average day for her in the sex trade included eight to 10 encounters with such men, referred to as johns, and she never saw any of them face repercussions.

“Nothing happens,” Kuhlman said, shaking her head. “Nothing happens to them.”

In Milwaukee, those who purchase sex, whether from prostitutes or victims of sex trafficking — and it’s often difficult to distinguish between the two — rarely face consequences in the criminal justice system.

However, most exchanges within the commercial sex industry go unreported with no arrests made. Of the cases where arrests occur, individuals who purchase sex can face criminal charges, but they also can be issued a municipal ticket, deferred to alternative treatment programs or have the charges dropped completely.

According to data provided by the Milwaukee Police Department, in 2015, 344 people were arrested for soliciting a prostitute in Milwaukee. Of those, 19 people participated in a “deferred prosecution” program instead of facing criminal charges, and 52 people were issued municipal citations for “loitering—soliciting prostitute.” In 2014, 407 were arrested, 52 completed the deferred prosecution program, and 57 were issued municipal citations.

As the number of arrests for prostitution has increased in recent years, from 65 in 2012 to 160 in 2014, the number of people arrested for soliciting a prostitute decreased by more than half, from 749 to 344. Milwaukee County community prosecutor Chris Ladwig attributed the dip in arrests of johns to programming aimed at reducing prostitution activity in Milwaukee, but he said that the numbers don’t indicate a decrease in people purchasing commercial sex. Rather, he said it could be that fewer are getting caught on the street as the crime goes further underground.

In fact, no data is available on the number of adult sex trafficking victims in Milwaukee, and there are only estimates of the number of minors at risk for trafficking. But experts say the extent of the problem is staggering.

Click here to read the rest of the article.

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Can't Attend Weekly Rotary Meetings? Need a Rotary Make-Up?  Do It On-Line or In-Person!

Did you know that you can get a Rotary meeting make-up by visiting one of a number of E-Clubs and reading some programs and giving your info so that you can receive a make-up.  OR you can go to another club and enjoy an interesting meeting.

Some options include;

http://www.recswusa.org/   -           Rotary eClub of Southwest USA

https://www.rotaryeclubone.org/   -  Rotary eClub One

 

Sept 20 noon - Milwaukee Rotary Club - Tom Smith, CEO Mason Wells - http://milwaukeerotary.com/events/list/index/Tuesday%20Speakers

Sept 21 noon - Mitchell Field Rotary Club - District Governor Julie Craig - http://www.rcomf.org/Speakers/26ef3d0a-efc1-4d34-8aac-c9360747e1bb

OR have fun attending a District 6270 Social event September 24 - noon to 11 p.m. -  Oktoberfest


 

Save the date...September 24th for a District 6270 social event at the Germantown Hunsrucker Oktoberfest at Dheinsville Historic Park, Germantown, WI.

Free admission and parking.  Fun for the whole family!

More information at http://www.germantownhistoricalsociety.org/oktoberfest_sponsors.html

or See more at: http://elmbrookrotary.org/event/district-6270-social-event---oktoberfest/#sthash.9M2luBJu.dpuf

 

 

 

 

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Rotary International Convention in Atlanta!  Are you joining us?

Let President Patti Lynch know if you plan to attend.  Register early and save!

Russell Hampton
National Awards Services Inc.
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Club Information
Latino Focused but not exclusive and English is our language! In the Latino tradition, your children are welcome to attend with you!
Service Above Self
We meet Tuesdays at 5:45 PM
Milwaukee Athletic Club
758 N Broadway
Milwaukee, WI  53202
United States
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District Site
 
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Learn more about Rotary and how it can help you fulfill YOUR dream!
 
Future Rotary Programs
 
Tuesday, Sept. 27 - 5:45 - 7 p.m. - Club Assembly -  Second brainstorming and planning session on how our club will follow up on our Young Professionals Human Trafficking Summit. Meeting at Milwaukee Athletic Club 
 
     
Tuesday, Oct. 4 - 5:45 - 7 p.m. - Social on the Roof at Milwaukee Athletic Club -  Meeting at Milwaukee Athletic Club
 FREE appetizers for non-Rotarians. Cash Bar.
 
Join us for some fun and conversation and views that really make the end of a day, beautiful!  Free appetizers and no charge for visitors.
 
Where: Milwaukee Athletic Club - see link above to get directions from wherever you are.
 
 
 
 
Tuesday, October 25 - 5:45 - 7 p.m. - County Executive Chris Abele - County Budget  Meeting at Milwaukee Athletic Club
 
 


 

IRONMAN TRIATHLETE MINDA DENTLER CHALLENGES WORLD TO END POLIO

Minda Dentler becomes the first woman hand cyclist to complete the 2.4-mile swim, 112-mile cycle, and 26.2-mile marathon of the Ironman World Championship in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, USA.

I was born in 1978 in Mumbai to a domestic worker and single mother. At six months old, I was paralyzed from the hips down by polio. The chances of surviving in India until your 18th birthday with a disability are very slim. My mother was unable to care for me and left me at an orphanage. I don't remember much about my time there because I was so young, but I know the conditions were primitive. I had no real hope that my life would become anything of note or that I would have the opportunity to be independent and overcome the burden of a very preventable disease.

I didn't know it then, but several years after I was born, a revolution in the way the world approached polio prevention came to India. That revolution was the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, which has reduced global polio cases by 99.9 percent since 1988. But like millions of others in India, I never received the two drops of oral vaccine that protect against the virus. In India, your health is vital to your social and economic opportunities. If you are healthy, you can get a job, and if you have a job, you can get married. Unfortunately, this simple passage of convention seemed beyond my reach. But then my life changed irrevocably once more.

At age three, I was adopted by Bruce and Ann Dentler and joined their family of two children and another adopted son, from Korea. I moved to Spokane, Washington, USA, shortly after my third birthday. Over the next few years, I underwent a series of surgeries on my hips, legs, and back to straighten my body, and I could eventually walk with leg braces and crutches. My parents had the same expectations of me as they did of my siblings and set the tone that having a disability should not prevent me from doing whatever I wanted to do with my life. I had to do the same chores and do my homework. It was a very happy childhood.

I loved to compete, so I threw myself into many activities, from debating at school to playing the piano. I graduated from high school and moved to Seattle to study business at the University of Washington. While in college, I interned at the White House and IBM. I studied abroad in Spain and backpacked through Europe by myself, wearing my leg braces and crutches. Upon graduating, I moved to New York City for a management consulting job. I pursued an MBA, got married, and now work at a large multinational insurance company. Through my example, I hope people can see that a disability shouldn't hinder someone from living a full and productive life.

While living in New York, I met Dick Traum, the first amputee to complete the New York City Marathon in 1976. Dick later founded a nonprofit, Achilles International, which provides free training and support to help people with disabilities participate in sports. He gave me a hand cycle, which is a three-wheeled recumbent bicycle propelled by the arms, and encouraged me to train for a marathon. This opened up a new world of opportunity for me, and I completed the New York City Marathon in my hand cycle in 2006.

My next challenge was thought to be impossible for a female wheelchair athlete: the Ironman Triathlon. I made the transition to triathlon and finished my first Ironman in Louisville, Kentucky, USA, and qualified for the world championship in Kona, Hawaii, in 2012.

The Ironman Triathlon requires a wheelchair athlete like me to swim 2.4 miles, hand cycle 112 miles, and push a racing wheelchair 26.2 miles, all within tight time limits for each stage of the course. But at the Kona Ironman, I failed to make the 10½-hour cutoff time for the cycling portion. I was disappointed, but I'd faced harder setbacks before. The failure steeled my determination, and I decided to regroup and try again the next year.

By October 2013, I was back at the starting line for the Kona Ironman in Hawaii for the second time. I was bidding to become the first woman hand cyclist in history to finish the Ironman World Championship. Just as my parents had insisted that I complete the same chores as my siblings, the Ironman event demanded that I complete the course within the same strict time limits as every other able-bodied competitor. I had qualified for the race and earned the right to compete on a level playing field, but if I did complete the race, it would mean something more than achieving another personal goal.

Every stroke in the water and crank forward on my hand cycle were movements for those who could not lift limbs paralyzed by polio. With every rotation of the wheels on my racing wheelchair, I was moving forward for the millions of polio survivors who would never get this opportunity. When I finally crossed the finish line 14 hours and 39 minutes after I started, I was overwhelmed with joy and excitement. It was a storybook ending and the realization of a dream that seemed impossible to achieve.

I'd followed Rotary's polio eradication efforts for some time when I had the honor of being invited to speak at a World Polio Day event in 2014. Since then, I've been one of Rotary's polio ambassadors, helping to raise awareness for the End Polio Now campaign. In this role, I was offered an opportunity to return to India for the first time since I was a child.

Last year I set off for the country where most people said polio could never be eradicated. But against the odds, one year after my first successful Ironman World Championship, India did eradicate polio – despite the challenges of crowded slums with poor sanitation, the second largest population in the world, the weakened immune systems of millions living in poverty without proper nourishment. Despite all this, Southeast Asia was certified polio free in 2014.

The enormity of this achievement is clear if you consider that less than a decade ago, India reported almost half of the world's new polio cases. But until the disease is eradicated everywhere, it could easily return. So on my trip, I participated in a National Immunization Day, when 172 million children through age five are immunized against polio.

One of the most memorable moments for me was meeting a polio survivor named Parveen at St. Stephen's Hospital in New Delhi. It was a stark reminder of a tale of two worlds. Here she was, the same age as me, but we are living very different lives. I was adopted and catapulted into a life of privilege. At age 37, Parveen is illiterate, without resources, and has been a burden on her family.

I do not want to see other children become victims of polio and suffer the lifelong effects of a preventable disease. It was heartbreaking to me, and, as a mother, I want for her and all children in the world, no matter their circumstances, to have a chance at a healthy life. Rotary is changing the world, one child and two drops of vaccine at a time.

I've had good fortune at various stages of my life. I was adopted by a loving family after three years in an orphanage. I was given my first hand cycle by Achilles International in New York. I had the support of my family to push me across the finish line in Hawaii. But I hope readers realize that my story is also one of empowerment and personal choice.

Whether you are a polio survivor, a supporter of the polio eradication effort, or even someone who is surprised polio is still a threat – we all have an important choice to make. We can choose to have our children vaccinated and ensure that other parents in our communities do the same. I know what it is to miss out on this life-changing vaccine, as my childhood wasn't the same. In India, I also met Rukhsar Khatoon, the country's last documented polio victim, and it made me realize that when we finally do end polio, our work will not be over.

There are 10 million to 20 million polio survivors worldwide, and they need more than physical rehabilitation. It will be another lifetime's work to ensure that every polio survivor has access to a good education and to prevent stigmatization in communities or the workplace because of a physical disability. The least we can do in the present is to make the choice to prevent more needless suffering by vaccinating our children. And soon, our children, and their children, will live in a world without polio. Just imagine.

Give to End Polio Now
Advocate for a polio-free world
Join Rotary for World Polio Day

 
As told to David Goodstone
9-Sep-2016
 
Birthdays & Anniversaries
Member Birthdays
Nestor Godinez
September 4
 
Tina Dozier-Weyand
October 3
 
Angie Rester
October 25
 
Robert Grede
November 5
 
Anniversaries
Robert Grede
September 5
 
Angie Rester
Bob Samse
October 24
 
Join Date
Robert Grede
October 1, 2012
4 years
 
Ana Docta
November 17, 2015
1 year
 
Tina Dozier-Weyand
November 17, 2009
7 years
 
Tre Waldren
November 19, 2013
3 years
 
Phillip Golden
November 24, 2015
1 year
 
Rosa Sugo-Golden
November 24, 2015
1 year