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Lions Clubs International is the world's largest service club organisation with 46,000 clubs and 1.4 million members in 193 countries around the world. The international headquarters is situated in Oak Brook, Illinois.
It was founded in the U.S.A. in 1917 by Melvin Jones and became truly International on March 12, 1920 when the first club was established in Canada. Membership is by invitation and attendance at meetings is expected on a monthly or fortnightly basis. Politics, religion or other contentious subjects are generally forbidden at club meetings. Lions are a truly community based organisation with a hierarchy that can take a member from a club to office at zone, district, national and international level. An interesting aspect of the operation of Lions Clubs is that all funds raised from the general public are used for charitable purposes with the administration costs of a Club kept strictly separate and paid for by its members.
The average age of Lion members is increasing and the average membership of clubs is decreasing in the Western world. This is typical of other service clubs such as Rotary International and Freemasons.
Lions Clubs International has had a history of support for the work of the United Nations since that Organisation's inception in 1945, when it was one of the non-governmental organisations invited to assist in the drafting of the United Nations Charter in San Francisco.
Lions are recognized worldwide for their service to the blind and visually impaired. This service began when Helen Keller addressed the International Convention at Cedar Point, Ohio on June 30, 1925 and charged Lions to be 'Knights to the Blind'.
In response to that challenge: