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Four
ROTARIANS ALL: SOME MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS
By definition, a Rotarian is bound to be one of the 'better element', as Paul Harris put it, and the system of
recruitment by invitation and of confining membership to one leader from each respective field in business and the
professions - hence the classification system - has ensured that this is the case. It is not surprising, therefore,
to find that the list of the 240 or so members of the PJ Rotary Club over the past thirty years reads rather like a
Malaysian 'Who's Who'.
It has already been noted that a profession conspicuously absent from the list of Charter members was that of
medicine. However, the omission was made well and truly good, so that by 1992 four out of the Club's thirty-one
past presidents had been drawn from that category.* This was a larger proportion than that of any other single
classification, apart from the business sector, which provided eight P.P.s but representing diverse areas. One
category for which no provision is made under the classification system is that of 'politician', and indeed it was
a rare Rotarian who changed his trade or profession for the hurly-burly of politics. The most notable exception to
this was Dato' Kok Wee Kiat, who in the end became totally consumed by the political life and ceased to be a
Rotarian, although he retained a link by being subsequently chosen to be one of the Club's honorary Rotarians.
There are a couple of other Rotarians who have engaged in politics either more quietly or less successfully, but
for most Rotarians the demands of political life are too demanding to be able to mix with their business or
profession.
*Admittedly, this figure is reached by taking medical practice to
cover all facets of the profession including dentistry.
In the nature of things most PJ Rotarians have established names well-known in their respective spheres, so well
established in fact that some people, before being invited to join and discovering, in the words of P.P. Teoh Kim
Theam, it was a way in which 'I could... serve the community', tended to regard the Rotary Club as lying beyond
their social level or their pocket. But what Rotary looks for is people who are not only successful leaders in
their respective fields but who are also fired by the desire to play a constructive role in the service of the
community in which they live.
Such people are not easy to find, but as a result of the hand-picking approach adopted by Rotary in acquiring
its members, those selected naturally tend to stand out as social leaders. In time PJ Rotary became crowded with
such individuals. There is Dato' James Peter Chin, for example, who during the course of his career, apart from
being a very keen Rotarian, has been associated with such disparate public bodies as the PJ Town Board/Municipal
Council, the National Cancer Society, the Assunta Foundation Hospital Board, the Selangor Vocational Guidance
Council and the Tourist Development Corporation (TDC) - the list is endless - apart from sitting at one stage or
another on over forty committees.** Then there was Dato' Lim Kok Wing, also very active in advertising and in
public affairs, but better known to the public at large as a cartoonist ('Guli-Guli'). Tara Singh Gill, the
electrical engineer, played a major role in the development of the consumer movement in this country - he was
president of FOMCA for eight years - alongside being a staunch member of Rotary, both in Seremban and PJ. Anyone
who has been interested in or concerned with the art of management will know of Sam Abishegam (who was a Charter
but rather short-lived member of Rotary) and President Tarcisius Chin, whose names are bywords in the field. In the
same way no one involved in the field of social welfare, particularly in the Federal Territory and Selangor, will
not be familiar with the name of Dr. Nallathamby Ganesan, just as everybody connected with the protection of the
environment will know of S.T. Sundram - two other pillars of PJ Rotary. There are many others.
** One factor contributing to James Peter
Chin's high profile is the fact that he is an advertising man. Indeed, he was proclaimed 'Advertising Man of the
Year' in 1976.
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