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Kalyan Banerjee, a member of the Rotary Club of Vapi, Gujarat, India, since 1972, is the selection of the Nominating Committee for President of Rotary International in 2011-12. Banerjee will become the president-nominee on 1 October if there are no challenging candidates.
Banerjee said he would like to see Rotary "blossom from being the world's most recognized service organization to being the most important NGO [nongovernmental organization] in the world.
"Rotary, it is said, has the strength of a government and the tenderness of a parent," he added.
Banerjee is a director of United Phosphorus Limited, the largest
agrochemical manufacturer in India, and the chair of United Phosphorus
(Bangladesh) Limited. He is a member of the Indian Institute of
Chemical Engineers and the American Chemical Society, a past president
of Vapi Industries Association, and former chair of the Gujarat chapter
of the Confederation of Indian Industry. He earned a degree in chemical
engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, in 1964.
Banerjee has served Rotary as a director, Rotary Foundation trustee,
committee and task force chair, International Assembly group discussion
leader, president's representative, and district governor.
The chair of the Southeast Asia Regional PolioPlus Committee, Banerjee
has served as a member of the International PolioPlus Committee for
many years and has attended international meetings with the World
Health Organization and UNICEF in that capacity.
Banerjee is a Major Donor, Benefactor, and Bequest Society member, and
has been awarded the Foundation's Citation for Meritorious Service and
its Distinguished Service Award.
Banerjee also serves as a trustee of Rotary club-sponsored trusts that
support many educational and community development programs in India,
including a 250-bed hospital.
He noted that Rotary's strengths include its ability to attract leaders
from different vocations around the world, as well as its role in
promoting peace. "Rotary needs to become the preferred organization for
today's generation to join and participate in, to make the world better
and safer and happier," he said.
Banerjee's wife, Binota, is a social worker and Inner Wheel club member. The couple have two children and four grandchildren.
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