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We Serve - Nearly 1.35 million Lions members in 194 countries
and geographic areas answer the needs that challenge the communities
of the world. Lions tackle tough problems like blindness, drug
abuse prevention and diabetes awareness.
Global neighbors - Lions members - men and women - provide
immediate and sustained relief in time of disaster and offer
long-term assistance to those in need. Lions collect and recycle
eyeglasses for distribution in developing countries and treat
millions of people to prevent river blindness.
Community Leaders - Lions improve the quality of life
in their local communities by building parks, supporting hospitals
and establishing water treatment programs.
For 85 years, whenever there
is a need at home or around the world, Lions members are there
to help - We Serve.
Lions Clubs International
History
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The International Association of
Lions Clubs began as the dream of Chicago businessman Melvin
Jones. He believed that local business clubs should expand their
horizons from purely professional concerns to the betterment
of their communities and the world at large. |
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Jones' group, the Business Circle
of Chicago, agreed. After contacting similar groups around the
United States, an organizational meeting was held on June 7,
1917 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. The new group took the name of
one of the invited groups, the "Association of Lions Clubs,"
and a national convention was held in Dallas, Texas, USA in October
of that year. A constitution, by-laws, objects and code of ethics
were approved.
Among the objects adopted in
those early years was one that read, "No club shall hold
out the financial betterment of its members as its object."
This call for unselfish service to others remains one of the
association's main tenets.
Just three years after its formation,
the association became international when the first club in Canada
was established in 1920. Major international expansion continued
as clubs were established, particularly throughout Europe, Asia
and Africa during the 1950s and '60s.
In 1925, Helen Keller addressed
the Lions international convention in Cedar Point, Ohio, USA.
She challenged Lions to become "knights of the blind in
the crusade against darkness." From this time, Lions clubs
have been actively involved in service to the blind and visually
impaired.
Broadening its international
role, Lions Clubs International helped the United Nations form
the Non-Governmental Organizations sections in 1945 and continues
to hold consultative status with the U.N.
In 1990, Lions launched its most
aggressive sight preservation effort, SightFirst. The US$143.5
million program strives to rid the world of preventable and reversible
blindness by supporting desperately needed health care services.
In addition to sight programs,
Lions Clubs International is committed to providing services
for youth. Lions clubs also work to improve the environment,
build homes for the disabled, support diabetes education, conduct
hearing programs and, through their foundation, provide disaster
relief around the world.
Lions Clubs International has
grown to include 1.4 million men and women in 46,000 clubs located
in 194 countries and geographic areas.
Lions Clubs International
Purposes
- To Create and foster a spirit
of understanding among the peoples of the world.
- To Promote the principles of
good government and good citizenship.
- To Take an active interest in
the civic, cultural, social and moral welfare of the community.
To Unite the clubs in the bonds of friendship, good fellowship
and mutual understanding.
- To Provide a forum for the open
discussion of all matters of public interest; provided, however,
that partisan politics and sectarian religion shall not be debated
by club members.
- To Encourage service-minded
people to serve their community without personal financial reward,
and to encourage efficiency and promote high ethical standards
in commerce, industry, professions, public works and private
endeavors.
Lions Clubs International Code of Ethics
- To Show my faith in the worthiness
of my vocation by industrious application to the end that I may
merit a reputation for quality of service.
- To Seek success and to demand
all fair remuneration or profit as my just due, but to accept
no profit or success at the price of my own self-respect lost
because of unfair advantage taken or because of questionable
acts on my part.
- To Remember that in building
up my business it is not necessary to tear down another's; to
be loyal to my clients or customers and true to myself.
- Whenever a doubt arises as to
the right or ethics of my position or action towards others,
to resolve such doubt against myself.
- To Hold friendship as an end
and not a means.
- To hold that true friendship
exists not on account of the service performed by one another,
but that true friendship demands nothing but accepts service
in the spirit in which it is given.
- Always to bear in mind my obligations
as a citizen to my nation, my state, and my community, as to
give them my unswerving loyalty in word, act, and deed. To give
them freely of my time, labor and means.
- To Aid others by giving my sympathy
to those in distress, my aid to the weak, and my substance to
the needy.
- To Be Careful with my criticism
and liberal with my praise; to build up and not destroy.
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Lions
Club
International
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