Abilene Kansas Rotary Club

Abilene Kansas Rotary Club Our impact starts with our members—people who work tirelessly with their clubs to solve some of our communities' toughest challenges.

PROMOTING PEACE
Today, 65 million people are displaced by armed conflict or persecution. Through our partnerships with several leading universities, Rotary Peace Fellows develop the skills to strengthen peace efforts, train local leaders to prevent and mediate conflict, and support long-term peace building in areas affected by conflict. We provide up to 100 peace fellowships per year at Rotary Pea

ce Centers. Learn how Rotary projects address the structural causes of conflict

FIGHTING DISEASE
More than 100 million people are pushed into poverty each year because of medical costs. We aim to improve and expand access to low-cost and free health care in underdeveloped areas. Our members educate and mobilize communities to help prevent the spread of major diseases such as polio, HIV/AIDS, and malaria. Many of our projects ensure that medical training facilities are located where the workforce lives. See how Rotary projects provide low-cost health care

PROVIDING CLEAN WATER
More than 2.5 billion people lack access to adequate sanitation facilities. At least 3,000 children die each day from diarrheal diseases caused by unsafe water. Our projects give communities the ability to develop and maintain sustainable water and sanitation systems and support studies related to water and sanitation. See how Rotary is building sustainable clean water and sanitation facilities

SAVING MOTHERS AND CHILDREN
At least 7 million children under the age of five die each year due to malnutrition, poor health care, and inadequate sanitation. To help reduce this rate, we provide immunizations and antibiotics to babies, improve access to essential medical services, and support trained health care providers for mothers and their children. Our projects ensure sustainability by empowering the local community to take ownership of health care training programs. Watch how Rotary helps bring health care to mothers and newborns in rural Haiti

SUPPORTING EDUCATION
Sixty-seven million children worldwide have no access to education and more than 775 million people over the age of 15 are illiterate. Our goal is to strengthen the capacity of communities to support basic education and literacy, reduce gender disparity in education, and increase adult literacy. Watch how a Rotary grant helps bring tablet technology to students in Fiji

GROWING LOCAL ECONOMIES
Nearly 1.4 billion employed people live on less than $1.25 a day. We carry out service projects that enhance economic and community development and develop opportunities for decent and productive work for young and old. We also help strengthen local entrepreneurs and community leaders, particularly women, in impoverished communities. See how Rotary helps workers achieve better wages and working conditions.

Beginning my morning with a good cup of coffee Back Country  Cafe
07/31/2023

Beginning my morning with a good cup of coffee Back Country Cafe

Address

300 NW 7th Street
Abilene, KS
67410

Opening Hours

12pm - 1pm

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Our Story

THIRD GRADE DICTIONARY PROJECT

Each year since 2006, the Abilene Rotary Club has presented an 860-page, hardcover, color photo illustrated dictionary to every Third Grade student in the Abilene, Chapman and Solomon school districts. In the last ten years, these valuable reference tools have been given to over 2500 area students, as well as their teachers.

Literacy is one of Rotary International’s major avenues of service to the world and the Abilene Rotary Club believes the dictionary project is a wonderful way to encourage reading among the young people in Abilene and the surrounding towns.

Each guest speaker at Rotary meetings signs a bookplate that is placed inside the front cover of a dictionary. The student also signs the book plate when they receive the dictionary, demonstrating it is theirs to keep forever. According to Abilene Rotarian Amy Hoch-Altwegg, “Handing out the dictionaries at the schools is a moving experience for members of the club. For some of these kids, this is their very first hardcover book and they actually hug it and cannot believe it is theirs to keep. The smile on their faces says it all.”