God tunes into the digital age
----------------------------
By Deborah Cameron
June 16 2003

In Australia's new northern bible belt, happiness is a warm transmitter. From Darwin 
and Kununurra, two big Christian missionary broadcasters want to win souls in Asia and 
this week their on-air evangelism enters the digital age.
"It will make a huge change in short-wave broadcasting because it will be as clear as 
an FM signal on a local station," said the director of ministries at HCJB World Radio, 
Dennis Adams.
As anyone with a short wave radio knows, an analog signal is prone to fade, whistle or 
erupt into static. From this week short-wave licence holders can begin broadcasting in 
digital format.
Mr Adams, who doubles as station manager of HCJB's six-month-old Kununurra 
transmitter, describes digital as a "real breakthrough", especially for radio 
missionaries.
The other big broadcaster, Voice International, beams programs in Indonesian, English, 
Chinese and Hindi from its Darwin transmitter into a region with a population of 2.8 
billion.
The audience has grown most rapidly in Indonesia, says Voice International spokesman 
Richard Daniel.
Partly this is due to the popularity of radio host Riady, who Mr Daniel describes as 
"an Indonesian John Laws" recruited by talent scouts in Perth. It is also because of a 
playlist that, though sprinkled with religious crooners, features Coldplay and Avril 
Lavigne.
By comparison, HCJB (which stands for Heralding Christ Jesus's Blessing) plays country 
music, middle of the road classics and national folk songs.
Both want to expand. In East Timor, Voice is setting up a Portuguese language 
broadcaster and has used its network to recruit 50 pastors from Brazil who are in East 
Timor building schools, Mr Daniel said.
Mr Daniel, who hails from Broken Hill where he owns the secular 2BH and Hill FM and 
has a 26-year history in radio, signed onto Christian broadcasting last year. 
He says that for the modern missionary, radio, email and SMS go hand in hand with 
field work.
Both organisations are phenomenally wealthy. They expanded to Australia after a 1999 
law allowed broadcasters other than the ABC to transmit internationally. 
While they face obstacles with digital broadcasts because listeners need to have a 
digital receiver, both networks are so well organised and funded that they are 
understood to be prepared to provide receivers or at least subsidise their $100 cost.

(Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 15 Jun 2003)

Regds,
Alokesh Gupta
New Delhi, India.




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