| Published
February 17, 2009 |
Volume
17, Number 2
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Soroptimist International Clubs Focus on Service to Women and Girls
The story of the founding of
the first Soroptimist Club, which occurred in Oakland in 1921, offers
an inspiring example of how attentive listening uncovers opportunity.
Calling on an Oakland business college, an organizer for a new men’s
club made his pitch to a woman who turned out to be the male business
manager he had expected to see. On discovering the “mistaken identity,”
the organizer was about to excuse himself when he heard the remark,
“When the men admit women as members of their service clubs, I would be
interested.”
A few months later, the organizer was meeting with
several prominent Oakland businesswomen in the Rose Room of Hotel
Oakland to discuss plans for the first women’s service club, which they
dubbed Soroptimist, taken from Latin to mean “the best for women.”
Today
Soroptimists are found in 124 countries, with over 3,100 clubs and
approximately 92,000 members. Initially targeted at women in business,
management, and the professions, the organization today includes
retirees, community volunteers, and those without any business
affiliation among its ranks. According to the Soroptimist
International (SI) website, the clubs “strive for human rights for all,
equality, development and peace through international understanding and
friendship. Because of their work, SI holds category 1 consultative
status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) of the United
Nations International Non-Governmental Organization.”
Among
its concerns, SI is known for having sounded an early warning about the
dangers of buried land mines in Bosnia, says Corrine Mavridis, a
long-time member and officer of the Pleasanton/Dublin chapter, which
was established in 1956. As part of its human rights outreach, the
organization is currently speaking out against predators trafficking in
young girls. “We think that kind of thing happens elsewhere, but it
exists all over. It is even present in our area here,” Mavridis
relates. One of the SI’s projects is to send speakers to meetings of
younger women to make them aware of the problem and how it can be
detected.
The local chapter, which Mavridis proudly points out
is part of SI’s Founder Region, has several other service projects
close to home, providing support to the Tri-Valley Haven and Oakland’s
Sophia House in Oakland, which serves children and families at risk for
homelessness. Other hands-on involvement includes Christmas traditions
like buying gifts for disadvantaged children and treating a group of
senior ladies to a festive lunch and chitchat. The Founder Region has
an ongoing program awarding $70,000.00 in fellowships and grants to
area women in the last year of their doctoral studies.
Meetings
are held twice a month, on the second and fourth Wednesdays, over lunch
at Vic’s All Star Cafe on Main Street in Pleasanton. Newcomers are
always welcome, Mavridis says enthusiastically. For more information,
contact her at (925) 846-6644 or visit www.sifounderregion.org.
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