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<strong>St</strong> <strong>Francis</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> Vol 9, No 4 | August 2013<br />

each week from <strong>the</strong> transmitters in Sines. Radio Logos on Sicily was broadcasting <strong>the</strong> same<br />

programs that RSB put out on TWR, but through FM. Some local channels in France also carried<br />

<strong>the</strong> programs of RSB. 70<br />

By 1981, RSB had 28 personnel. 71 That was a very high number, considering RSB’s output. On a<br />

weekly basis, about 2 hours of radio programs were produced. The BCCs received about 250-300<br />

new applications every month, while <strong>the</strong>re were about 1400 active students, and that probably<br />

created <strong>the</strong> need for many personnel. If it is true that <strong>the</strong> large number of personnel was mainly for<br />

handling <strong>the</strong> BCCs, that was done mainly by non-North Africans, as <strong>the</strong> majority of personnel of<br />

RSB were non-Arabs.<br />

The few Arabs that worked in Marseille were treasured by <strong>the</strong> organization. ‘[The] gifts of our<br />

North African and Middle Eastern bro<strong>the</strong>rs and sisters are <strong>the</strong> backbone of many of our ministries.<br />

Without <strong>the</strong>m <strong>the</strong>re would be no radio programmes,’ Field Director Keith Fraser-Smith wrote in<br />

1985. ‘We urgently need fur<strong>the</strong>r native-speaking Arabic personnel to join our team.’ 72 That same<br />

need was expressed again and again throughout <strong>the</strong> years. RSB’s desire to have more Arab coworkers<br />

was hampered mainly by its system of missionaries being self-funded and, related to that, its<br />

lack of general funds for paying salaries to Arabic staff.<br />

NAM changed its name into Arab World Ministries (AWM) in 1987. RSB at <strong>the</strong> same time<br />

changed its name in Arab World Media. 73 According to one staff member, RSB changed its name<br />

because ‘<strong>the</strong> ministry covers more than radio, and it isn’t really a formal school’. 74<br />

In 1988 RSB increased its broadcasts over ELWA by broadcasting <strong>the</strong> same programs <strong>the</strong>y also<br />

supplied to TWR. This six-fold increase in airtime on ELWA was considered justified after research<br />

in Morocco showed that many people listened to ELWA, and that <strong>the</strong> signal was strong in <strong>the</strong> early<br />

morning and <strong>the</strong> early evening. ELWA also reached sou<strong>the</strong>rn Moroccan areas where TWR was<br />

weak. 75<br />

1.2.7 New Directions for RSB’s Media Ministries: 1990 and beyond<br />

Co-Productions with GMU<br />

From April to September 1990, RSB and GMU reduced <strong>the</strong>ir programs on TWR to 15 minutes<br />

per night, in order to use <strong>the</strong> production time for developing a new program format. The 15 minutes<br />

of airtime that became available on TWR for North Africa during those six months, were used for<br />

broadcasts of Kabyle, Tarafit and Tachelhit programs. RSB was involved in arranging cooperation<br />

between different agencies for those broadcasts, but not in <strong>the</strong> productions. In October 1990, RSB<br />

and GMU were back on TWR with an improved program of 30 minutes. 76<br />

Sīkālī had been away from RSB for some years, but returned to work <strong>the</strong>re in 1989. He became<br />

responsible for all broadcasting of RSB. In October 1990 Sīkālī began with <strong>the</strong> new program format.<br />

The program was called Nimshī Ma‘ān (Let’s Walk Toge<strong>the</strong>r). The personalities and abilities of <strong>the</strong><br />

Sīkālīs were very important for RSB in <strong>the</strong> 1990s.<br />

Vishanoff wrote about that:<br />

[Sikaly and his wife] gave cohesion of vision and personal presence to <strong>the</strong> program. He is a respected<br />

counselor in his family, effective in pastoral and evangelistic ministry on <strong>the</strong> personal level, and he has<br />

something of <strong>the</strong> poet in him. He also has very good literary Arabic (being university trained in law), and<br />

70 ‘Awakening <strong>the</strong>m By Radio!’, in Frontline (September 1978), p. 6. Don Harris and Joseph Sikaly, ‘What’s Happening in<br />

1980’, in Frontline (September 1980), p. 5. In 1985 NAM had its first programs broadcast in Toulouse. In 1986, RSB was<br />

also involved in local broadcasts in La Grande Combe, Valence, Grenoble and <strong>St</strong>rasbourg. This had become possible after<br />

France deregulated broadcasting. See ‘On <strong>the</strong> Air in France’, in NAM-Media (Autumn 1985), and ‘Goal Reached in One<br />

year’, in NAM-Media (Autumn 1986), p. 2.<br />

71 ‘Radio School of <strong>the</strong> Bible’, in Cross & Crescent (Winter 1981), p. 12.<br />

72 Keith Fraser-Smith, ‘Looking Ahead with <strong>the</strong> RSB Director’, in Frontline (March 1985), pp. 4-5.<br />

73 In order not to confuse <strong>the</strong> names, <strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>sis uses AWM for Arab World Ministries, <strong>the</strong> mission organization. For <strong>the</strong><br />

offices in Marseille, it only uses <strong>the</strong> name RSB.<br />

74 ‘Arab World Media’, in NAM-Media (Autumn 1986).<br />

75 ‘Electronic Worship for <strong>the</strong> Arab World’, in Frontline (June 1988), p. 1.<br />

76 ‘Berber Programs on <strong>the</strong> Air’, in Contact (April 1990), p. 1. ‘Arabic Programming’, in Contact (April 1990), p. 1.<br />

<strong>St</strong> <strong>Francis</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> is published by Arab Vision and Interserve 10

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