Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Rotarians hold an interfaith funeral service for Sam Frobisher Owori at Lugogo Indoor Stadium.

Rotarians hold an interfaith funeral service for Sam Frobisher Owori at Lugogo Indoor Stadium.
Speaker after speaker praised Sam Owori for his love and passion for service.
The Widow Rtn. Norah Owori eulogising her husband Sam Owori at Lugogo Indoor Stadium during the Interfaith celebration service.
Rtn. Norah Owori cleaning her husband's Portrait
as Rtn. Prof Charles Olweny answers a journalist's question

I don’t know what to say. You’ve really shown us that you loved Sam and you love us.
I have not come here to make a speech but I wanted to say thank you all for loving Sam.

The only thing I wanted to tell you is that Sam is gone but Rotary Must move on. Some of you are saying that now that Sam is dead, we shall not go to Toronto. You must go to Toronto. I must go to Toronto. Let’s increase on our numbers in Africa so that we have two Directors sitting on a Board. The light of Rotary must shine even more after Sam has long gone.
Thank you very much for coming those who traveled from far and near.
Uganda Police officers carry the casket containing remains of Sam Owori
at Lugogo MTN Arena after the Interfaith Service held on Wednesday morning

District Governor Ken DG Ken Mugisha Wycliff said that Rotarians had come from far and near to celebrate "Our own 'Nelson Mandela' of Rotary by the name of Sam Owori"
He pledged to continue doing Sam Owori's vision and ensure that it is achieved. "We are going to work together to achieve Sam's dream of seeing Africa become a zone and having more and more rotarians" he said.
DG Ken Mugisha and Vice President of Rotary International matching
out of the Arena after the Interfaith Service

DG Ken Mugisha Wycliff thanked the Government of Uganda for according Sam Owori an official send off. "The financial contribution given to us by government for Sam's funeral has never been given even to its officials" he said amidst applause from the mourners.

He called upon rotarians the world over to know that the journey for Sam Owor's vision had just begun and called upon them to walk together to achieve that vision. "Let's celebrate his vision through Action" he concluded.
Rev. Canon Ssentongo

Rev. Canon Grace Sentongo, a Past President of the Rotary Club of Kajjansi called upon rotarians to emulate Sam Owori whom he talked of as a very brilliant man.












Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Rotary Club of Kajjansi holds fellowship in honour of RIPE Sam F. Owori

This evening, Rotarians converged at Nican Resort Sseguku to eulogise a legend in Rotary Circles. The man who was to be #RotaryInternational President 2018/2019. Rtn. Sam Frobisher Owori.
It was an evening to celebrate a life well lived by a man who was so passionate about rotary.
Vigil fellowship at Rotary Club of Kajjansi 

At exactly 7:00pm, President Apollo Bakwate of the Rotary club of Kajjansi called the meeting to order. After the usual rituals, he called upon Past President Canon Grace Ssentongo to lead prayers and share the word of God.
Just before, he started his sermon, he called upon Rtn. Hannington Sebuliba to lead the Rotarians and visitors in a hymn "It is well with my soul". He played the song from a Yamaha keyboard using strings and you would hear Rotarians singing like heavenly angles. It was quite a moment to reflect on the words in that song. As they sang along you would believe that Sam was in their midst.
PP Canon Grace preaching

Candles were lit and Sam's portrait on foamboard was at the front of the fellowship venue, with his trademark smile. His life was cut short.
Canon Grace talked about Rtn. Sam as a man who lived a life of serving humanity not only in rotary but also his church at All Saints Cathedral Nakasero and Kisugu Church of Uganda. He said that two weeks back he had met Sam at Shanghai Hotel in Kampala. She said that he had invited him to attend his installation in Toronto Canada and said that he had told him that if he had no money he would give him a one way ticket and he looks fie the return. That was Sam the Rotarian.
He encouraged Rotarians to emulate Sam's life who had been elevated to higher positions but remained simple, calm and down to earth.



Many Rotarians young and old talked about him and what they remembered about him.
Sam Owori's life can be summarised as a life that was well lived in a simple and humble way.
We uphold Sam's family in God's hand to be their guide during this trying moment in their family.


Here are songs that were used during the vigil fellowship as we eulogised our fallen Rotary International President Elect Sam Frobisher Owori.

It is well with my soul

Peace Perfect Peace

What a friend we have in Jesus

T'is, so sweet to Trust in Jesus

Saturday, July 15, 2017

A tribute to Rotary International President Elect Sam Owori

A TRIBUTE TO ROTARY INTERNATIONAL PRESIDENT ELECT SAM OWORI

By Rtn. Hannington Sebuliba

Death Oh! Death! Why do you always strike at such a time? You always come with your ugly claws and grab the best.

We are speechless, we are sobbing.

Tears are flowing our eyes for one man whose love for serving humanity is incomparable.
Samuel Frobisher Owori, the Rotary International President Elect 2018/19, has breathed his last at a time when we in the African continent have been rejoicing to have our second RI President and the first in East and Southern Africa.


Death, you are so cruel! How can you take Sam at such a time? Who paid you death? We shall never forgive you death for cutting short our beacon of hope.
Rotary International mourns, Africa mourns, Uganda mourns for a man whose life has been nothing but Rotary.

So passionate he was to see that Rotary membership grows from  stagnant 1.2m worldwide to 2 million Rotarians.

We will not bury his dream but will ensure it comes true. Determined we are  ready every Rotarian to invite one Rotarian to serve above self.

In 38 years of service above self, Sam grew Rotary clubs in Uganda from 9 to 89. He grew Africa to an Independent Rotary Zone. He inspired many of us to serve humanity.
Always with a smile which became his trade mark. We shall miss you Sam Owori but will always be in our hearts.

Now I know Angels in heaven are welcoming you in glory. Resting in the bossom of Abraham. Chrlerubim and Serafim welcoming you and thanking you for making a world a better place to live in especially for the less privileged.

Till we meet RIPE Sam Frobisher Owori.
Thanks for your service above self.
x

Friday, July 14, 2017

Fare well Rotary International President Elect Sam Frobisher Owori


It is a sad day for Rotary International, Uganda and Africa as a whole for the demise of Rotary International President Elect (2018-19) Sam Frobisher Owori.
RIPE Sam Owori is reported to have died during an operation on his leg, during which his blood pressure dropped suddenly and he never recovered.
RIPE Samuel Frobisher Owori
During his one-year term as Rotary’s 108th president beginning on 1 July 2018, Owori was to focus on building membership worldwide and increasing visibility and understanding of Rotary.
At the time of his death, Owori was the CEO of the Institute of Corporate Governance of Uganda.
Before that, he was executive director of the African Development Bank, managing director of Uganda Commercial Bank Ltd, and director of Uganda Development Bank.

He has studied law, employment relations, business management, corporate resources management, microfinance, and marketing at institutions in England, Japan, Switzerland, Tanzania, and the United States, including Harvard Business School.
May His soul rest in peace
He died on Thursday in Dallas, Texas in the United States while undergoing surgery on his leg.
RIPE Sam Owori attending the Blood Bank launch at Mengo in February

In October 2016, Owori was confirmed president-nominee of Rotary International – a humanitarian service organization that unites leaders committed to improving lives and bringing positive, lasting change to communities around the world.

As a member of the Rotary Club Kampala, Uganda for the last 38 years, Owori said Rotary had become a way of life for him – with the intrinsic value and core belief in mutual responsibility and concern for one another as a cornerstone.

He played an instrumental role in growing the number of clubs in Uganda from nine to 89 over the course of 29 years.
Since becoming a member of Rotary in 1978, Owori served Rotary as regional Rotary Foundation coordinator, regional Rotary International membership coordinator, Rotary International Representative to the United Nations Environment Program and UN-Habitat, and Rotary International director. 
I was chanced to have worked closely with him during the Rotary Blood Bank construction as a member of the Board. He was a down to earth man and very resourceful.

Just in June during the Rotary International Convention in Atlanta, the ever smiling Sam Owori had made a very moving acceptance speech below;

RIPN Sam Owori’s acceptance remarks at Atlanta Convention

President John and Judy, President-elect Ian and Juliet, senior Rotary leaders, my family of Rotary!

I joined Rotary in 1978, and I will remain forever grateful to two people. First is my friend, doctor, and mentor, professor Charles Olweny, who invited me and made it his duty to persuade a reluctant and suspicious me to attend a Rotary club meeting. I finally went out of respect and was pleasantly surprised to discover that the club was full of people I already knew. This is the power of invitation and persistence.

Charles brought me into Rotary. But what made me want to remain a Rotarian were two successful Rotary projects, starting with a young Karimajong girl, Margaret Rose Illukol, from a remote northeastern part of Uganda. Margaret’s entire face had been chewed up by a hyena when she was left sleeping alone in the thatched hut of her nomadic parents.

The Rotary Club of Kampala took up the case, and after wide press publicity, Australian Rotarians came ahead of American Rotarians and collected Margaret from Kampala and took her to Newcastle, Australia, where it took more than 20 complicated surgeries over several years for her face to be reconstructed. Margaret Rose not only survived, but went on ahead to become a registered nurse at the same hospital where she had been treated.

The second project, which the American Rotarians started after they arrived too late for Margaret, was what today is globally known as the Gift of Life. This started with successful open-heart surgeries for three children: Grace Agwaru, John Engole, and Robinah Nakabuye from Kampala. Thanks to Rotarian generosity, they are all well and alive. This is the power of Rotary projects, and for me it was impossible to remain indifferent after learning of these cases.

The second person I am grateful to is PDG Juli Adelusi-Adeluyi of Lagos, Nigeria, who gave me confidence that I could become something. He came to me after I made a small presentation at Hiroji Mukasa’s Presidential Conference in 1983 in Nairobi, looked straight at me and said, “Young man, you will one day be a district governor.” Juli crossed my Rotary path again twice as an IA trainer in 1987, and as a substitute RI president’s personal representative at my district conference in 1988.

Today, 39 years later, because someone invited me, and another one gave me confidence, I stand before you with great joy and utmost humility to accept the nomination as president of Rotary International for 2018-19.

Friends, I know that many Rotarians would qualify to lead this organization. But only one person can do so at a time, and I am glad and humbled that I was selected to be that person for 2018-19. I was at the bus stop at the right time, and what you see here today is about opportunity. This honor is shared by my family, country, and continent, knowing that I am only the second person ever

to reach here from that old continent of 55 countries and 1 billion people. Africa has benefited in so many ways from this organization, and it is a continent of great Rotary potential for membership, projects, as well as contributions.

I pledge to look forward and backward to embrace changes, and flexibility to reinforce, rather than lose sight of, the fundamentals of our cherished value propositions. I will continue the culture of collaboration by the troika at the top echelon of our organization, and draw on the knowledge and experience of the past presidents who have done so much for Rotary. In addition, adherence to strategic planning will be entrenched for smooth annual successions and consistent direction. I look forward to strengthening growth, retention, and extension, as well as good governance, including evaluations.

Our organization has made landmark strides globally in polio eradication, health, water, literacy, and other concerns, and today we stand tall at the threshold of great possibilities. As a result, we should acknowledge and exploit Rotary’s capacity and power to change the world, and I invite you all to join me to propel our Rotary ship into the orbit of relevance, visibility, and sustainability.

Rotary affords us an incredible potential to serve humanity. But truth must be told. In the process of doing good, we are the biggest beneficiaries, because our lives change. We become better people and enjoy that intrinsic satisfaction to which we cannot put a price. It is true that One Profits Most Who Serves Best. Accordingly, let us fold our sleeves and get ready to have fun in Rotary Serving Humanity, and Rotary: Making a Difference.

Long live Rotary! May it grow in stature and scope to do even more good in the world. our nations, and our world.