Carnegie Hall goes purple for polio eradication

Carnegie Hall to be lit up purple for World Polio Day


Carnegie Hall goes purple for polio eradication

Dunfermline’s Carnegie Hall will be lit up in purple to mark World Polio Day on Saturday 24th October.

Members of Carnegie, Dunfermline and West Fife Rotary clubs are delighted that Fife Cultural Trust (ONFife) has agreed to light up the hall as part of worldwide events to mark the day. They hope it will help to raise awareness of Rotary International’s long-standing campaign to save children from this terrible disease, which can cause death, paralysis and life-long disabilities.

West Fife Rotarians are joining colleagues throughout Great Britain and Ireland in holding all sorts of events to celebrate the achievements of Rotary’s pioneering efforts to rid the world of polio.

Many of the activities will use the colour purple, which is a symbol of the fight against polio. It is inspired by the colour of the dye painted on the little finger of each child who has been vaccinated.

President Libby Seath of Carnegie Dunfermline Rotary Club, speaking on behalf of all three Dunfermline clubs, commented,

“We’re proud to be marking World Polio Day locally, and recognising the work of Rotary and our partners in the fight for a polio free-world. Together we will end polio.”

The incidence of polio has plummeted from about 350,000 cases in 125 countries per year to just over 100 cases in two countries in 2020: a drop of more than 99.99 per cent since Rotary and its partners launched the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) more than 30 years ago. Only Afghanistan and Pakistan are still reporting cases of ‘wild’ poliovirus.

A big step towards a polio-free world occurred this year when the whole of Africa was declared polio free. To sustain this progress, about 2 billion doses of the vaccine still have to be given to more than 400 million children in up to 60 at-risk countries every year. This is in addition to the routine immunisations that happen elsewhere around the world, including in the UK and Ireland.

Libby Seath added,

“Until the virus is eradicated, there is a real threat that polio could return, putting children worldwide at risk.”

Rotary has committed to raising US$50 million each year to support global polio eradication efforts, with that funding matched 2-to-1 by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Rotary has contributed more than $US1.9 billion to ending polio since 1985, including tens of thousands of pounds contributed by the Carnegie, Dunfermline and West Fife Rotary Clubs and their partners and friends.

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