Every Flag Tells a Story: Veterans, Clean Water, and Global Goals
This month on Rotary in the Heart of California, I had the joy of sitting down once again with our District Governor, Jay Hislop, to talk about how people right here in the Central Valley are changing lives across the street—and across the world.
From Lodi to Merced, Tracy to Yosemite, the stories Jay shared remind us that service isn’t an abstract idea. It looks like flags in the pre-dawn dark, pinky fingers stained purple, and students in a Nigerian village reading under solar-powered lights late into the night.
Honoring Veterans in Merced and Lathrop
Jay started with a powerful local tradition in Merced: the Field of Honor at Merced College. Over Veterans Day week, volunteers place more than 2,000 American flags in a broad green field—each one representing a veteran or first responder. The display is staffed around the clock by volunteers who stand watch, welcome visitors, and quietly honor the service and sacrifice those flags represent.
There’s music from a local marching band, a few short remarks, then people are invited to walk among the flags. It’s not a somber funeral service; it’s a living, breathing thank-you to the men and women who have worn the uniform.
Up in Lathrop, the tribute looks a little different but carries the same heart. On national holidays, Rotarians, Interact students, and other volunteers are out before sunrise, placing American flags in permanent sidewalk holders all over town. After the holiday, they roll them up, carefully store them, and do it all again the next time.
If you’ve ever driven through Lathrop on a holiday and felt a little swell of pride seeing flags lining the streets—that’s your neighbors, quietly serving.
Global Goals, Local Action—Right Up the Road
Jay also highlighted a special upcoming event: Global Goals Local Action, a one-day Rotary presidential conference in San Francisco on December 11.
The gathering will celebrate the 80th anniversary of the United Nations charter, which was signed in San Francisco. Rotary played a behind-the-scenes advisory role then and continues to partner with the UN today on issues like peace, health, and clean water.
Rotary International President Francesco Arezzo will be there, along with community leaders and international partners, exploring how local collaboration—like what we see in our own towns—can power truly global projects. The event is open to the public, not just Rotarians.
Two Drops, One Purple Pinky, and a World Without Polio
From there, Jay took us halfway around the world to Pakistan, where he joined a World Polio Day delegation in Lahore.
In schools, clinics, and even at the city zoo, he and other volunteers vaccinated hundreds of children against polio. Parents would pause, talk it over, then nod. The children—already familiar with the routine—would tilt their heads back and open their mouths for just two drops of vaccine.
No needles. No tears. Just a few seconds of courage, followed by a purple mark on a tiny pinky finger—proof they’d been vaccinated.
That simple act, repeated millions of times in places like Pakistan and Nigeria, is how Rotary and its partners are pushing polio to the brink of extinction. And yes, people in our district have been part of that effort for decades.
From Hand Tools to Hope: A Women’s Center in Nigeria
Jay then shared a remarkable story from Nigeria.
In a rural area near Port Harcourt, many women are subsistence farmers, working with basic hand tools and earning barely enough to survive. Their dream wasn’t luxury—it was modest but profound:
* A safe place to learn skills
* Enough income to feed their children reliably
* And, above all, the ability to send their kids to school
A local women’s union had been slowly building a two-story structure over 14 years—buying a few cinder blocks whenever they could, hiring a mason when funds allowed. When Rotary stepped in, that unfinished shell became the Ama Okwe Women’s Center, a fully functioning vocational training hub.
Through a Rotary global grant and generous local partners, the building was completed, fitted with classrooms, equipment, and training programs. Today, women there are learning tailoring, catering, hairdressing, baking, and even computer skills—pathways to real income and real choices for their families.
Clean Water, Solar Lights, and Study Groups on the Niger River
In another Nigerian village along the Niger River, Jay’s club partnered with local Rotarians on a major water, sanitation, and hygiene project.
Before the project, families collected brown river water—the same river used for bathing and, in many cases, as an open toilet. Not surprisingly, maternal and infant mortality rates were painfully high.
Over two phases, Rotary funded:
* Deep wells
* A purification system
* Elevated storage tanks powered by solar energy
* Banks of clean, modern toilets
To keep everything running, the village formed a local “water district” that charges a small, affordable user fee. That revenue pays for maintenance and daily water testing to ensure the system stays safe and sustainable.
And then came the surprise.
Because the solar array was already there, the project team added area lighting around the water point and toilets. What happened next wasn’t in any grant paperwork:
Students from the village, who had never had a decent place to study after dark, began gathering under the lights in the evening. They formed informal study groups, reading, practicing, and preparing for high school and college entrance exams by the glow of panels Rotary had installed to pump water.
A clean water project quietly became an education project, too.
From Project Partner to Rotary International President
One of the clubs Jay partnered with on that water project is the Rotary Club of Trans Amadi. Back in 2016, he met a Rotarian there named Yinka Babalola. At the time, they were simply two volunteers working on a shared dream: clean water for a village.
Fast forward to today, and Yinka has been called to serve as Rotary International President-Elect after the sudden passing of his predecessor. When Jay recently saw him at a Rotary gathering in Albuquerque and publicly shared how proud he was of his friend, Yinka stood and said simply:
“I’m still just an ordinary Rotarian.”
That humility is at the heart of what Rotary is all about—ordinary people, working together, doing extraordinary things.
Why These Stories Matter Here at Home
If you live anywhere from Lodi to Merced, from Yosemite to Tracy, you are closer to these stories than you might think.
* The Field of Honor in Merced
* The holiday flags in Lathrop
* Vaccinations in Pakistan
* A women’s center in Nigeria
* Clean water and nighttime study groups on the Niger River
All of these are connected to people in our Rotary District—your neighbors, coworkers, friends, and fellow community members.
As Jay put it, Rotary isn’t just about what happens inside a weekly meeting. It’s about what we do together, locally and globally, to make life safer, healthier, and more hopeful.
Watch the Full Conversation
We unpack all of these stories and more in this month’s episode of Rotary in the Heart of California. I hope you’ll take a few minutes to watch, be inspired, and maybe even imagine your own role in the next chapter of this story of service.
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