Lions Global Mission Statement

Empowering volunteers to serve their communities, meet humanitarian needs, encourage peace and promote international understanding through Lions clubs.

Whilst we are autonomous and our focus is doing whatever is necessary to help our local community, all Lions are part of a global service network and through global initiatives can really make change happen fast and on a large scale.

Lions serve our local community – youth, elderly and anyone in between.

Lions International award grants. Since 1968, the Lions Clubs International Foundation has awarded more than $670 million, about £430 million, in grants to support Lions humanitarian projects around the world, including major projects such as LIBRA based here in London. LIBRA is a trust set up by the South East of England Lions Clubs and currently its Chairman and Secretary are members of Farnham Lions.

The Foundation was ranked the number one Non-Governmental Organisation in a 2007 study. (Source:The Financial Times)

Lions are helping communities following natural disasters by providing for immediate needs such as food, water, clothing and medical supplies and aiding in long-term reconstruction.

Our motto is “We Serve”.

Take a look at our UK national and Global websites by clicking on the appropriate link below:

Lions Clubs International – British Isles

Home | Lions Clubs Internationa

Lions Clubs International purposes

  • To organise, charter and supervise service clubs to be known as Lions clubs.
  • To coordinate the activities and standardise the administration of Lions clubs.
  • To create and foster a spirit of understanding among the peoples of the world.
  • To promote the principles of good government and good citizenship.
  • To take an active interest in the civic, cultural, social and moral welfare of the community.
  • To unite the clubs in the bonds of friendship, good fellowship and mutual understanding.
  • To provide a forum for the open discussion of all matters of public interest; provided, however, that partisan politics and sectarian religion shall not be debated by club members.
  • To encourage service-minded people to serve their community without personal financial reward, and to encourage efficiency and promote high ethical standards in commerce, industry, professions, public works and private endeavours.

Lions code of ethics

  • To show my faith in the worthiness of my vocation by industrious application to the end that I may merit a reputation for quality of service.
  • To seek success and to demand all fair remuneration or profit as my just due, but to accept no profit or success at the price of my own self-respect lost because of unfair advantage taken or because of questionable acts on my part.
  • To remember that in building up my business it is not necessary to tear down another’s; to be loyal to my clients or customers and true to myself.
  • Whenever a doubt arises as to the right or ethics of my position or action towards others, to resolve such doubt against myself.
  • To hold friendship as an end and not a means. To hold that true friendship exists not on account of the service performed by one another, but that true friendship demands nothing but accepts service in the spirit in which it is given.
  • Always to bear in mind my obligations as a citizen to my nation, my state, and my community, as to give them my unswerving loyalty in word, act, and deed. To give them freely of my time, labour and means.
  • To aid others by giving my sympathy to those in distress, my aid to the weak, and my substance to the needy.
  • To be careful with my criticism and liberal with my praise; to build up and not destroy.