Sarasota Sister Cities Sustainable Economic Development
The RJ Celebration Continues!
Sarasota City Commissioners pictured here listen to a presentation by Sarasota Sister Cities' representatives at May 15 hearing.
At the close of the late session, the City of Sarasota gave its final approval of the designation of "Sister City" to Rapperswil-Jona, Switzerland.
In addition to Nelle Camardo, (RJ) City Director and Marianna Janz-Wecke, a contingent of other SCAS members attended to lend morale support.
Ms. Camardo is currently traveling in Switzerland to celebrate and share this milestone with her Swiss counterparts. Congratulations to all on a job well done!
MAY LUNCHEON HONNORS SISTER CITIES FST
WRITE-A-PLAY WINNERS
May 19, 2017 - 11:30am-2:00pm - Bird Key Yacht Club
For more info and reservations email:vp-communications@sarasotasistercities.com |
Apr 26, 2017 Luncheon 11:30am Bird Key Yacht Club, Annual Membership Meeting and Elections, President Marianna Janz-Wecke
Sarasota Sister Cities
Annual General Meeting and 2017 – 2018 Board Election
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
11:30 am-1:30pm
BIRD KEY YACHT CLUB
301 Bird Key Drive, Sarasota
Take this opportunity to join President Marianna Janz-Wecke and welcome our newest Board Members and meet with the full Board of Directors. Learn about the Association's priorities for the future and how you can become more involved in our activities and events.
A. Grilled Chicken Caprese Salad
Composed Greens, Balsamic Vinaigrette
Garlic Breadstick
B. Macadamia Nut Crusted Snapper
Citrus Butter SauceCaribbean Basmati
C. Vegetarian Portobello Caprese
Dessert: Strawberry Sponge Cake Napoleon
Cost: $26 per Person
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Luncheon Reservations Form
$26 per Person
Please mail your Reservations Form to arrive before April 21
Make check payable to: Sarasota Sister Cities Association
Mail to: SCAS Treasurer, Mr. Werner Knoop,
7115 Kensington Circle, University Park, FL 34201
Make check payable to: Sarasota Sister Cities Association
Mail to: SCAS Treasurer, Mr. Werner Knoop,
7115 Kensington Circle, University Park, FL 34201
Or pay online with Credit Card or PayPal at – sarasotasistercities.com
Click to View and Print the RSVP FormSister Cities Invities You to Attend Reception and Lecture
This
project is the culmination of a cultural exchange that began in 2005 when Don
and his wife Nina Weber Worth met the lead architect for the Shanghai World’s
Fair who was in charge of preserving historic Art Deco buildings in Shanghai.
This fortuitous convergence occurred as part of a delegation visit to Shanghai
organized by President and Vice President Duane Finger and Jill Dye of the
Sarasota Chapter of the US-China People’s Friendship Association (USCPFA) and
hosted by the Chinese People’s Association for Friendship with Foreign
Countries (counterpart to Sister Cities International).
An additional achievement of this historic 2005 delegation was our first official meeting with the Xiamen (Fujian Province) government, pursuant to negotiating a sister city relationship, arranged with the assistance of Dr. Carolyn Bloomer, Chair of Sarasota Sister Cities China Study Committee. Sarasota’s Chinese Sister City relationship with the Siming District of Xiamen Municipality, which became official in 2007, is now celebrating its 10th anniversary year.
Craig Hullnger Passes Torch!
It has been my pleasure to
serve Sarasota Sister Cities as the Vice President of Communications. We
have come a long way. We have a nice Web Site, Blog, Facebook, Twitter,
LinkedIn, Google+, and Pinterest Page. We also have a large number of photos
and a few videos on our blog.
It is my pleasure to
introduce you to Toni Duval, our incoming VP of Communications. She is an
outstanding leader with extensive experience in communications and
organizational development. Please join me in welcoming Toni as our newest
VP. You can learn more about Toni on her web site - tldconsultants.com
I will still be involved with Sarasota Sister Cities and look forward to many years of efforts to enhance and improve our organization.
Annual Luncheon Celebrates Sarasota Sister Cities Impact
Annual Luncheon Celebrates
Sarasota Sister Cities Impact
As
I sat at my table during the Sister Cities Association of Sarasota “Celebrate
60 Luncheon”, I was struck by the various languages I heard. I was
sitting with the Switzerland contingent, all speaking Swiss-German. At
the table to the left of me, I could hear Italian and at the table to the right
of me, the conversation was in French. Clearly, this group’s focus on
relationship building through interaction is working.
At the table in front of me sat seven Past-Presidents, representing two thirds of the Sarasota organization’s history. Wells Purmont (1976-1986), Hope Burns (1994-2001), Linda Rosenbluth (2001-2005), William Wallace (2005-2008), Carla Rayman (2008-2011), John Halbert (2011-2013), and Beth Ruyle-Hullinger (2013-2016) were congratulated for their service by Dr. Raymond Young, V.P. of Education and acknowledged their service. Under their leadership, cities in Russia, France, Israel, Canada, Scotland, Italy, China, Mexico, and Switzerland were all welcomed into the Sarasota family.
Dr.
Young then provided a history of SCAS events that have made an impact on our
Community including the creation of a Tree Walk on City Island that
commemorates all of Sarasota’s Sister Cities, the delivery of actual
architecture from theaters in Italy and Scotland to Sarasota, A Sister City
“Write-a-Play” youth competition, as well as numerous other business and
municipal visits to and from Sarasota.
Throughout
its history, through its mission and actions SCAS has reinforced its mission to
develop respect, understanding and cooperation through citizen diplomacy.
Working outside the government, in what President Dwight D Eisenhower called
“People-to-people diplomacy” in 1957 when he established the Sister City
Program which to date encompasses over 130 countries worldwide.
As the luncheon
adjourned and members were mingling, the various languages gave way to the one
we all had in common with words of praise, appreciation, and friendship for
those who all believe in peace and understanding.
Sarasota History & the SRQ Quiz Article
Nice article in the Sarasota History & the SRQ Quiz by Jana Susan Paley.
facebook.com/groups/1688767301403435/permalink/1886636788283151/
facebook.com/groups/1688767301403435/
Hi Spoonbills...Today's feature on Vladimir, Russia will be further delayed, but this time it is not because of my schedule--the Sarasota Sister Cities webpage is malfunctioning. The page opens but it almost immediately become unresponsive! If any of our Spoonbills are active members of the Sarasota Sister Cities chapter, please let someone know. (Our page is working now) As the website is so rich information about the basis of the relationship with our sister cities, if it does not become operational, our features will be limited to the stories I find in the Sarasota press, information supplied to me from my adopted aunt Linda Rosenbluth who has been active with the group for years, and the foreign press. So sorry! As I wait for the website to work, I am going provide some background on the Sister Cities program that we previously covered in May of 2016. facebook.com/groups/1688767301403435/permalink/1886636788283151/
facebook.com/groups/1688767301403435/
One of our most active members, Jib Blome Browning, asked yesterday, "what are Sister Cities actually?" It is a great question which we explored when we conducted our first virtual tour of Sarasota's Sister Cities here at Sarasota History & the SRQ Quiz, but there is no reason not to go over it again, especially as we have so many new members in our flock of Spoonbills. Today's feature about the "twinning," that is what Sister Cities International calls it when two cities adopt one another, between Sarasota and Vladimir, Russia will further explore Jib's question.
For those of you who read the posts from our first Sister Cities Week, you know that Sister Cities International (SCI) was born out of a call to action by the administration of President Dwight D. Eisenhower which asked all United States citizens to serve as ambassadors to other countries in order to promote peace, prosperity, and even to create common understanding between people of different backgrounds. The Eisenhower administration believed that if American cities allied with different cities across the globe in some sort of formal manner and that if the citizens of those place made efforts to learn about each other through sending delegations of visitors natural cooperation would develop.
In response to President Eisenhower's call for a new kind of diplomacy, let us call it "citizen statesmanship," Sister Cities International, a nonpartisan 501(c)(3) nonprofit group was born in 1956. Since its inception, the Sister Cities International network believes it has helped Americans explore their differences and their common bonds with others who share our small planet. Just seven years after Sister Cities International began, Dallas Dort, then President of the young New College, and David Lindsay, Jr., Publisher of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune decided Sarasota should participate in the program. New College was in its infancy and Dort reasoned that a relationship with a city that had a long established center of higher education would behoove his school. Sarasota twinned with Santa Domingo, Dominican Republic which was home to the oldest university in the "New World."
Since building that first relationship with Santo Domingo, Sarasota has twinned with three cities in Europe, one city in the Middle East, a city in Canada and a city in Mexico, as well as a city in the Far East and the Russian city we feature today, Vladimir. Listing the cities would be easier, but then that would make this week's SRQ Quizzes a lot less fun and it would ruin it for people who want to look back at the SRQ Quizzes from our first Sister Cities Week in May of 2016. When the Sister Cities program began, the group imagined that American cities would create a bond with a single foreign city and would stir a huge amount of cultural exchange--what the group never envisioned was American cities twinning with more than one other city. Why not create relationships with several cities? Well, no city ever posed that question until Sarasota decided to twin with Vladimir.
Vladimir, Russia |
Soon after the collapse of the Soviet Union and what seemed like the end of the longstanding Cold War, two Sarasota groups sought to form a bond with Vladimir. Carl Weinrich, the estimable long time leader of the the Sarasota YMCA, hoped to build a YMCA in the Russian city and Sarasota Bay Rotary Club officer Michael Pender, Sr. wanted to export the concept of the Rotary Club to Vladimir. To assist in these endeavors, Pender and Weinrich asked Sarasota Sister Cities President Hope Byrnes to explore adopting Vladimir. Byrnes began to expedite the process.
Soon a glitch developed in the twinning process when Sister Cities International denied the Sarasota-Vladimir association because the organization's rules stated that only one country's city could adopt a tie with a foreign city. Bloomington-Normal, Illinois had already established a tie with Vladimir--the two cities had just formalized their sisterhood. But what could possibly be wrong with having additional relationships? Sarasota Sister Cities decided to start a bit of war which would ultimately change the rules of the parent organization!
Byrnes argued that Sarasota's first sister city, Santo Domingo, had decided to twin with Miami; meanwhile, though the Sarasota Sister Cities chapter considered the Dominican Republic's largest city now to have an "emeritus" status as its sister, the parent organization recognized it as "legal" for Santo Domingo to have two American sisters. If it was okay for Santo Domingo, what would be the problem if Vladimir twinned with Bloomington-Normal and Sarasota?
As battle lines were drawn, Vladimir's representatives sat on the sidelines while Sarasotans and the people in the Illinois city duked it out with the leadership of Sister Cites International. Believe it or not, at first Sister Cities International stood by its ruling, but Byrnes with the able assistance of Mayors Gene Pillot, Nora Patterson continued to petition to establish the tie with Vladimir. It became a matter of civic pride for the threesome and after digging in their heels for two years there was a leadership change at the parent organization and the charter was amended to allow more than one American city to twin with a foreign city.
The Sarasota Sister Cities chapter victory in what should be called "The War for the Twin" changed how Sister Cities International works all for the better, but it also calls into question the goals of the organization. Jib smartly asked about the underlying purposes of the alliances and how does and American city decide to twin with a foreign city? When we conducted the first tour of Sarasota's Sister Cities in May which included the history of the relationships with Santo Domingo, Treviso, Dunfermline, and Hamilton, Ontario as well as Bradenton's twinning with Barcarrotta, Spain some of our more vociferous Spoonbills like Bill Watrous asked the same thing. What do cities need to share in common to make the relationships mutually beneficial?
Though Dallas Dort and David Lindsay, Jr. felt that New College would benefit from the relationship with the University Santo Tomas de Aquino which would later be more simply known as the University of Santo Domingo and David Lindsay, Jr. reasoned that Sarasota's young tourist bureau could learn something from the largest city in the Caribbean, ultimately the two cities shared little else in common and the sisterhood failed to blossom. It became clear to the leadership of the Sarasota Sister Cities chapter that there needed to be an underlying reason for the twinning.
The bond with Treviso, Italy is rooted in the Asolo Theatre's historic opera house--A. Everett "Chick" Austin, Jr., the first Director of the John and Mable Ringling Museum found what is now the Asolo Theatre's first opera house staging and interior in crates. The theater had been built in 1798 in Asolo which is in the province of Treviso, but the u-shaped theater set had been dismantled in 1930 and placed in storage. After Austin rescued it and restored it in Sarasota, the jewel-box theater became the pride of our city. Reaching out to twin with Treviso made perfect sense.
The story behind the desire to twin with Dunfermline, Scotland is similar to the Treviso story. What Sarasotans know today as the Mertz Theatre at the Asolo was first an opera house in Dunfermline. After the Dunfermline Opera House was basically condemned to death in its native Scotland as the city did not have funds to continue its operation, the baroque theatre was given a second chance to sing when Harold and Esther Mertz bought it and gifted it to the Asolo Center for the Performing Arts. Five time Sarasota Mayor and very active Spoonbill Lou Ann Palmer played a major role in bringing the opera house back to life and she also was an active leader with Sarasota Sister Cities. Once the opera house reopened in 1990 on Sarasota soil, talk began about twinning with Dunfermline, The two cities tied the sisterhood knot 2001.
Some of the other pairings make less sense, but they still have been the source of great mutual enjoyment. You see, there really is no firm answer to Jib's or Bill's question about what the cities need to share in common for the twinning to be successful. Sarasota has little in common with the industrial port city of Hamilton, Ontario save for one of its mayors loved Sarasota and often vacationed on Longboat Key; our cities twinned in 1990. Bradenton adopted Barcarrotta because it was the birthplace of Conquistador Hernando De Soto whose ship landed on the shores of the Manatee River in 1539. Though Sarasota Sister Cities chapter has chosen to twin with 9 different cities across the globe, Bradenton, which formed its Sister Cities chapter a year before Sarasota joined the organization, decided to focus its relationship on Barcarrotta and has never twinned again.
Stay tuned ! Much more to come!
Jana Susan Paley
facebook.com/groups/1688767301403435/
www.facebook.com/groups/Tel Mond, Israel
www.facebook.com/groups/
Merida, Mexico
Mar 15, 2017 Luncheon 11:00 am Bird Key Yacht Club 60th Anniversary Celebration Luncheon of the Sister Cities International Association
Past Presidents of Sarasota Sister Cities
|
March 15, 2017
11:00 am Luncheon
Bird Key Yacht Club
Join the 60th Anniversary Celebration Luncheon of the Sister Cities International at the Bird Key Yacht Club on Wednesday, March 15, 2017. The celebration will include a presentation on the History and Development of Sarasota Sister Cities Association over the past 60 years with a description of how SCAS has contributed both to our community and that of our Sister Cities around the world.
Past presidents of SCAS will be recognized as part of the presentation and the foundation of our exciting people-to-people program will be illustrated through our Student, Artistic and Delegation Exchanges, Special Events and One World Awards.
The presentation will be given by Dr. Raymond Young, VP-Education and long term member of the Association. The event will be of special interest to both new and continuing members of the Sarasota Sister Cities Association as well as members of the general public.
All reservations must be received by March 10, 2017
Join the 60th Anniversary Celebration Luncheon of the Sister Cities International at the Bird Key Yacht Club on Wednesday, March 15, 2017. The celebration will include a presentation on the History and Development of Sarasota Sister Cities Association over the past 60 years with a description of how SCAS has contributed both to our community and that of our Sister Cities around the world.
Past presidents of SCAS will be recognized as part of the presentation and the foundation of our exciting people-to-people program will be illustrated through our Student, Artistic and Delegation Exchanges, Special Events and One World Awards.
The presentation will be given by Dr. Raymond Young, VP-Education and long term member of the Association. The event will be of special interest to both new and continuing members of the Sarasota Sister Cities Association as well as members of the general public.
All reservations must be received by March 10, 2017
Menu Selection
Menu A: Florida Citrus Salad
Pecan Crusted Chicken Mixed Greens w/ Orange and Grapefruit Sections, Avocado, Red Onion and Toasted Almonds and Strawberry Garnish Served w/ Vidalia Dressing
Menu B: Shrimp and Portobello Mushroom
Sautéed Shrimp and Portobello Mushroom
Topped with Sweet Onions, Peppers and
Monterey Jack Cheese
Menu C: Vegetarian Pasta Primavera Alfredo
Dessert: Chocolate Crème Brule
Meal Choice includes Coffee, Tea, Iced Tea and Soda
Cash Bar for all other drinks
You can pay by Credit Card or Check.
Please mail your Reservations Form with Check payable to Sarasota Sister Cities Association to SCAS Treasurer, Mr. Werner Knoop, 7115 Kensington Circle, University Park, FL 34201
$26.00
Please mail your Reservations Form with Check payable to Sarasota Sister Cities Association to SCAS Treasurer, Mr. Werner Knoop, 7115 Kensington Circle, University Park, FL 34201
PAYMENT BY CHECK
SCAS or Sister Cities Association of Sarasota
C/O SCAS Treasurer Werner Knoop
7115 Kensington Court
University Park, FL 34201
C/O SCAS Treasurer Werner Knoop
7115 Kensington Court
University Park, FL 34201
CLICK TO PAY BY CREDIT CARD OR PAYPAL
We have been having trouble with our account.
If the link does not work please pay by check.
Sorry for the inconvenience
Madagascar and the Lemurs March 9, 2017 4 pm, Selby Library Barbara Frey & Dr. Alison Grand, 5 pm, Clasico Meet and Greet
Click to see more photos:
March Presentation
Madagascar and the Lemurs
March 9, 2017
4 pm, Selby Library
5 pm, Clasico Meet and Greet
Barbara Frey & Dr. Alison Grand
Barbara is the former President of Sarasota Alliance Francaise and was the Director of Education for IBM Europe in Paris for 16 years. She recently traveled to Madagascar with the Lemur Conservation Foundation and will give an introduction to the island, its history and its very unique flora and fauna, particularly the indigenous and severely endangered lemurs.
Alison is Executive Director of the Lemur Conservation Foundation. Previously she was employed with Disney’s Animal Kingdom, worked on conservation programs in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and cared for lemurs at the Baton Rouge Zoo. Alison will discuss the efforts being made to save the lemurs at the Lemur Conservation Foundation in Myakka City and in Madagascar.
The presentation will be followed by
Meet and Greet at Clasico from 5 to 7 PM
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