About this class

In honor of World Polio Day, which is widely recognized on October 24, the Rotary Clubs of Oshawa and Oshawa-Parkwood, on behalf of the 10 Rotary Clubs in Durham Region, are co-hosting “World Polio Day 2025 LIVE” on Thursday, October 16, 2025. Note: This year’s event will be hosted exclusively on Zoom. Tune in at 7 p.m. (EST) on October 16 for the World Polio Day 2025 LIVE broadcast from Oshawa Ontario.

During the World Polio Day 2025 event at Durham College, we will see Rotary’s latest efforts to eradicate polio from our planet, as we celebrate the 37th anniversary of the founding of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.

We will watch videos, from Francesco Arezzo (President of Rotary International 2025-26), Holger Knaack (Chair of the Trustees of The Rotary Foundation 2025-26), and Aziz Memon (Rotary’s PolioPlus Chair in Pakistan) as they talk about Rotary’s world-wide efforts to eradicate polio from the world.

Mike McGovern (Chair of the Rotary International PolioPlus Committee) will then update the world-wide audience about Rotary’s current efforts to eradicate polio.

Joining us for the LIVE panel discussion will be Mike McGovern and Valarie Wafer (Past Rotary International Vice-President and Director and Vice-Chair of the Rotary International PolioPlus Committee) as they all discuss what Rotary is doing to eradicate polio, the challenges ahead, and what we can do to help.

During our LIVE broadcast we will see proclamations, indicating October 24 as World Polio Day, being presented to the 10 Rotary Clubs in Durham Region from Durham Regional Chair John Henry (a fellow Rotarian), thanking these local Rotary Clubs for their efforts to raise funds and create awareness about our efforts to eradicate polio from the face of the earth.

We will also see End Polio Now Flags being raised and flying high over many of the cities in Durham Region, the municipality of 700,000, just east of Toronto.

We will take as many questions as possible from our viewers online and in The Rotary Global Classroom and direct them to our LIVE panel members.

We encourage our viewers to join the 100 guests, who will be in the Rotary Global Classroom, as the Rotary Clubs of Oshawa and Oshawa-Parkwood partner with Durham College to present World Polio Day 2025 LIVE from Oshawa, Ontario, Canada and see for yourself how close we are to eradicating polio from this world.

Background

The world is on the verge of eliminating one of the most dreaded diseases of the 20th century -- poliomyelitis. During the first half of the 20th century, polio crippled over a half a million people every year. Even today, children in some developing countries continue to fall victim to the disease. But thanks in large part to Rotary International and to the 1.4 million Rotary members worldwide, including the Durham Region Rotary Clubs, the disease will soon be all but a memory.

As World Polio Day draws closer, the world is 99.9 percent polio-free, but the fight to end polio is not over, and Rotary Clubs world-wide continue to raise funds to meet the challenge.

When Rotary and its partners launched the Global Polio Eradication Initiative in 1988, there were 350,000 cases of polio in 125 countries every year. We’ve made great progress against the disease since then. Today, polio cases have been reduced by 99.9 percent, to 16 cases so far this year – 14 in Pakistan, and 2 in Afghanistan. We remain committed to the end.

The Global Polio Eradication Initiative, formed in 1988, is a public-private partnership that includes Rotary, the World Health Organization, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and PreventionUNICEF, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and governments of the world. Rotary’s focus is advocacy, fundraising, volunteer recruitment and awareness-building.

Since 1985, Rotary members world-wide have contributed nearly US$2.2 billion to help immunize nearly 3 billion children against polio, and we have helped secure billions of dollars from donor governments worldwide. Because of the efforts of Rotary and its partners, nearly 19.4 million people who would otherwise have been paralyzed are walking, and more than 1.5 million people are alive who would otherwise have died.

Coinciding with World Polio Day, Rotary is ramping up its advocacy work in the 200 countries and regions where Rotary clubs exist, to encourage every national government to commit to the funding levels needed to close the gap.

With polio nearly eradicated, Rotary and its partners must sustain this progress and continue to reach every child with the polio vaccine. Without full funding and political commitment, this paralyzing disease could return to polio-free countries, putting children everywhere at risk. Since 2020, and right through 2029, Rotarians have been challenged to raise US$50 million each year to support global polio eradication efforts. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has again pledged to match that 2 for 1, for a yearly annual contribution of $150 million.

Today, polio remains endemic only in Afghanistan and Pakistan. But it’s crucial we continue to work to keep other countries polio-free. If all eradication efforts stopped today, within 10 years, polio could paralyze as many as 200,000 children each year.

Guests


Michael K. McGovern

Chair of Rotary International Polio Plus Committee

Valarie K. Wafer

Rotary International Vice President 2021-22 & Director 2020-22 and 2025-26 Grants Chair of the R...

Francesco Arezzo

Rotary International President 2025-26

Holger Knaack

Chair of the Trustees, Rotary Foundation 2025-26

Aziz Memon

Chairman of the Pakistan PolioPlus Committee, and Trustee of The Rotary Foundation 2020-2024

Resources