CALCUTTA was the home town for the first Rotary club in the
mainland of
Asia
. R.J. Combes, the manager of a
steel products company while on a business trip to
U.S.A.
was so impressed by the "Friendship,
fellowship, and service" aspects of the movement called
Rotary that he wanted to introduce the idea to his friends
in
Calcutta
also. There was no difficulty for him
to convince enough people and convene the first meeting on
26 September, 1919.
The
new club was chartered just after three months of the
first meeting, on the New Year day of 1920 to be exact. All
the twenty charter members were non-Indians.
The first Indian member was S.C.Rudra who was inducted in
1921. In 1921 itself Sir Surendranath Banerjee was made an
honorary member. The first Indian to become the club
secretary was Nitish C. Laharry (1926) who climbed all steps
to reach Rotary's top slot viz. R.I. president ship in
1962-'63.
A.FM.Abdul
Ali was the first Indian to adorn the collar of a
club president.
Except for the lone club chartered in Lahore (in Pakistan
now) in 1927, for about a decade India had to be content
with only one club, i.e. R.C. of Calcutta. Things changed
when James Wheeler Davidson of Calgary, Canada arrived on
Indian shores with a firm determination to spread Rotary in
India
. In fact he was responsible for establishment of
Rotary clubs in different countries including
Australia
,
New Zealand
, Southern Europe,
Egypt
,
Siam
and
Japan
and was known as 'Marco Polo of Rotary.'
Jim Davidson planted Rotary in
Bombay
as well as
Madras
(now Chennai) in 1929.
Of the
38 charter members of the club in
Bombay
,
37 were non-Indians. The only Indian was Sir Phiroz Sethna,
a legislative member, who later served as district governor
(1937-'38).
F C .James of United Planters Association of South India,
who was a past president of R. C. of
Calcutta
helped Jim Davidson in the formation of the Madras Club. On
10 May 1929, thirty charter members, all non-Indians
assembled and elected C. G. Armstrong Chairman of Madras
Port Trust as the charter president A.A.Hayles, former
editor of The Mail was also among the charter members. In
1929 itself Raja Sir M.A. Muthaiah Chettiar was inducted
into the club.
Even though Davidson organised a Rotary club in
Delhi
also in 1929, in a couple of years the club had to be closed
down as the membership tapered off due to one or other
reasons. In 1930 two clubs were formed- Etah and
Meerut
.
Mahatma
Gandhi addressed Rotary Club of Calcutta which had
only non-Indians on the rolls even then.
The growth of Rotary in
India
was rather very
slow for many years, thanks to the predominance of
foreigners in the clubs and other reasons such as
agricultural nature of Indian economy.
In 1933 Rotary branched out to
Amritsar
and to
Bangalore
in 1934. By 1936 Ahmedabad,
Baroda
,
Jamshedpur
,
Poona
and
Sholapur
had Rotary clubs. Three clubs were
chartered in 1937,
Lucknow
,
Surat
and
Cochin
. R. C. of
Cochin
had
22
charter members of whom 10 were non-Indians and Sir R. K.
Shanmugam Chetty was the charter president. (Chartered on 23
August 1937) This club had the unique privilege of meeting
at an Island (
Wellingdon Island
) which was built
by one of its own members (Sir Robert Bristo).
Asansol,
Madurai
and
Rajkot
clubs were formed in 1938 Another
three clubs at
Agra
,
Salem
and
Jabalpur
came into existence the next year. The
Delhi Club was also revived in 1939, thanks to the efforts
of Sir. Frederick James, the first Rotary governor from
India
.
Dehra Dun
and Dharward invited Rotary in 1940. The
next year Rotary moved to
Bhopal
, Mithapur,
Belgaum
and Nilgiris.
Nilgiris
club extended Rotary to
Coimbatore
in
1943.
Visakhapatnam
and Navasari clubs were already
functioning.
Patna
club with 36 charter members was also formed the
same year. Other clubs of 1943 origin were
Kakinada
,
Vijayawada
, Bhuj,
Patiala
,
Kanpur
,
Allahabad
,
Guntur
,
Kolhapur
and
Patna
.
Tirunelveli
club was also chartered in 1943 with 45 charter
members and District Collector Viswanatha Rao as the charter
president. Rotary clubs of
Nagpur
, Baruch, Satara,
Mysore
and
Bhavnagar
were formed in 1944. In the two
years that followed
Cuttack
, Dhanbad,
Akola
,
Nasik
, Ratlam,
Moradabad
, Faizabad, Gadag,
Indore
,
Jaipur and
Gorakhpur
were added to the Rotary
India map. Tirunelveli club took Rotary to Tuticorin also in
1946. As many as ten clubs were chartered in 1947. They
were: Godhra,
Gwalior
, Palanpur, Nadiyad, Ambala,
Mussoorie,
Lucknow
(2), Ahmednagar, Hubli,
Vellore
and
Howrah
.
By the time
India
became independent, there were 71 Rotary clubs (14 in
Gujarat, 10 in
Maharashtra
, 10 in UP, seven in Tamil Nadu, seven in
Karnataka and 23 in another 10 states) with a total
membership of 3121 members.
Up to 1931-32, Rotary clubs in
India
were
non-districted. From 1932 to 1935 clubs in
India
,
Burma
and
Ceylon
were grouped under provisional District A.
On 1
July 1935 District 89 was formed with clubs in
Afghanistan
,
Burma
,
Ceylon
and undivided
India
. The first district governor
was Sir Frederick E James (1935-36). Sir Phiroz Sethna
followed him the next year. Sir F. E.
James
had to be once again at the saddle due to the sudden
death of Phiroz Sethna.
The first conference of Provisional District "A" was held in
1932 at
Calcutta
with Sir F. E. James as the first governor
with a total registration of 39. The 1934 conference was
held at
Bombay
and 1936 at
Bangalore
. Up to 1936,
R.I. president was not represented at the conferences and
there was no conference in 1934-35.
The first conference of Rotary District was in
Madras
in 1936'37 under the governorship of Sir F E. James. Haji
M.Eusoff represented the R.I.President at this conference
which had a registration of 63. The second conference was at
Baroda
which had a registration of 121. At the third conference
which was held at
Colombo
the attendance further
improved to 210.
In 1939 District 89 was bifurcated to create District 88
also which consisted of
Afghanistan
, Burmah and
part of undivided
India
. B. T Thakur, Col.Warren Boulton and again
B.T.Thakur were the D.G.s between 1939 and 1942.
The district conferences of District 88 were held at
Calcutta
(regn.220),
Bhopal
and
Agra
(regn.82). District 88 was subsequently
renumbered as District 90 which had one of its conferences
at
Jamshedpur
with Nitish C.
Laharry
as District Governor. This conference had a
registration of 154 and R.I. President's representative was
Sir Frederick James.
Growth
of Rotary in independent
India
was also
sluggish. In seven years (up to 1954) only 54 clubs could be
added. In 1950, there were only 198 clubs with a Rotarian
strength of 7,785 in the whole of
Asia
, the least
numbers both in matter of clubs as well as total number of
Rotarians, among the six Rotary regions then existed.
By 1958, there were five Rotary districts in
India
,
Ceylon
,
Burmah
,
Pakistan
,
Nepal
and
Bhutan
with about 7,500
Rotarians. In another ten years, there were 430 clubs and
16,055 Rotarians in these countries.
In 1968-69,
Pakistan
became a separate district.
The number of districts in
India
was 12 in
1970-71. From seventies the growth of Rotary in
India
picked up some momentum. The number of clubs which stood
slightly above three hundred more than doubled in the next
ten years. The same tempo continued in the first half of
eighties also. In 1980-81 there were 899 clubs in
India
in 14 R. I. Districts with a membership of 35,172 Rotarians.
The extension of Rotary in the second half of eighties broke
all the previous records. The number of clubs chartered
between 1985 and 1989 (five years) was more than double the
number of clubs formed between 1975 and 1984 (ten years).
Out of the current strength of 1947 (1999 April figure)
clubs 19 percent of the clubs are those established in five
years between 1985 and 1989 (362 clubs).
In the first half of nineties also Rotary continued to grow
well. Of the existing Indian clubs 317 were chartered during
these years. District 3140 alone contributed 50 clubs during
the period.
In the beginning of 1995-96, when the system of regions in
the Rotary world was abolished and the new zone system was
introduced,
India
had 1654 Rotary clubs in 28 districts and the
number of Rotarians was 58,777. In 1996 there was remarkable
growth of Rotary in
India
, thanks to Calgary
Challenge. As many as 133 clubs were chartered in 1996. In
1995 the number of new clubs was only 74. In the first
quarter of 1997, there were 1,791 clubs in
India
with a total membership of 68,043.
The first Asia regional conference was held in
Delhi
in 1958 with a registration figure of 2,913. The regional
office established in
Bombay
in 1934 was shifted to
Singapore
in 1939, but the
same was closed down in 1948. A full fledged regional office
was opened in
Delhi
in 1984. Another Asia
regional conference was held in
Delhi
in 1987 and
this regional conference broke all previous registration
records with its 10,501 registrations.
Delhi
again was fortunate to host the Council on
Legislation in 1998.
During the last 88 years of Rotary's existence in
India
,
several world leaders emerged from this region. The first
Asian to become R.I. President from Asia was Nitish Laharry
(1962-63) from
Calcutta
. We had to wait another thirty years for
another Indian to be elected as R. I President. In 1991-92
Rajendra K.Saboo (Raja Saboo) from
Chandigarh
had
the rare opportunity of leading the world's leading service
organisation. Raja Saboo also served as the Chairman of The
Rotary Foundation (1996-97), the only Indian to hold the
position in Rotary's history.