Tag archive for: Radio Alarm Clock

Radio personality, pastor, evangelist, film producer, musician, writer...AlainNormandpassed away on June 29, 2021, at the age of 82.

Alainwas born on May 21, 1939, in the French city of Cannes, four years after his brother Guy and four months before the start of World War II. His father was called up for military service. A prisoner of war, he returned ill from a German camp and died a few months after the end of the war.

Alainregularly accompanied his mother to an evangelical church and, at the age of twelve, he decided to become a disciple of Jesus Christ. A year later, he moved to Geneva because his mother remarried a Swiss man.

In Geneva,Alaindiscovers a new evangelical church. He obtains a Federal Certificate of Competence (FCC) in administration, discovers the guitar, and wins a championship in a junior team at Servette Football Club.

In 1958,Alainbegan theological training in England at the International Bible Training Institute. At the end of his training, he was summoned to the French Consulate in London to perform his military service in the French army. Because he was a conscientious objector, he was recruited as a paratrooper-nurse, without weapons. Trained in parachuting and nursing, he went to Algeria, which was at war, and mainly cared for soldiers. This period gave him the opportunity to experience many human and spiritual adventures. He meditated particularly on these words of Jesus: "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God" (Matthew 5:9).

After being demobilized,Alainleft for Frankfurt. He wanted to learn German, but also to learn to love Germans in the name of Christ. There, he worked in an American bank, attended an evangelical church, and continued to study the guitar. Upon returning to Geneva, he decided to commit himself more radically to the service of God. A friend from his church said to him, "Radio Réveil in Lugano is looking for an employee. You're really cut out for it!"

Read his full biography written by Claude-Alain Baehler and published on July 4, 2021, on lafree.info.

Listen to these four short stories produced by Alain Normand, taken from the archives of the Cassette Service.

The director of O2vie, Dodji Juliette Kpessou, is a journalist, writer, presenter, blogger, and YouTuber. She lives with her husband in Porto Novo, the capital of the Republic of Benin. Interview.

Juliette, what is your mission on the airwaves?
Since August 2013, I have been bringing the Gospel to everyone through Hosanna Radio, a media outlet of the Protestant Methodist Church of Benin. As head of the entertainment section, I also present the news bulletins.

How did you discover Radio Réveil?
It was in January 2019 at this fabulous training course for Christian radio broadcasters from French-speaking Africa in Lomé, Togo; a melting pot of experiences where I had the pleasure of meeting Emmanuel Ziehli, director of Radio Réveil.

How and why did you create the O2vie column?
O2vie is a motivational capsule based on the word of God. It started out as a written column that I posted on social media and my blog. Now, the audio adventure has begun with Radio Réveil and my YouTube channel. The water of life, a drop every day from God's inexhaustible source. It's a way for me to bring the Good News with the colors of Africa.

You wanted an introduction to this column in a very particular tone.
Radio is the voice; and Africa is the power of the voice, of speech. The tone is chosen deliberately because it recalls the old sage in the moonlight reciting a tale. It is a sign of the mystery of Africa, a voice that invites you on the journey of life. In cinema, this is called the Voice of God.

A word for listeners
We are One in a bond of love. God loves you, and I love you too. Here are my three daily goals: be yourself, be true, and believe in God.

The O2vie show airs on RADIO R every Saturday at 6 a.m., 9 a.m., 1 p.m., and 5 p.m., and on Sunday at 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. Find all the podcasts here.

A commitment in Togo to training journalists from evangelical radio stations in French-speaking Africa and the 20th anniversary of the program Hautes Fréquences on RTS La Première provide Serge Carrel with an opportunity to show that, in both situations, evangelical journalism requires boldness and professionalism.

Reprint of Serge Carrel's "Opinion" published on January 25, 2019, onlafree.info

In our daily lives, there are collisions of experiences that make us reflect on our practice. Last week, I was one of the facilitators at the Training Seminar for Evangelical Radio Stations in French-speaking Africa in Lomé, Togo, a gathering of more than a hundred people organized by Radio Réveil in Bevaix (NE). It was an opportunity to meet journalists, presenters, and technicians from the hundred or so radio stations that define themselves as evangelical in French-speaking Africa. Last Sunday evening, RTS Religion marked the 20th anniversary of Hautes Fréquences, the flagship program of the public service radio's religious programming team, on La Première at 7 p.m.

In French-speaking Africa as in Switzerland, what presence?

In both situations, there is an opportunity to question the presence of evangelical journalists in the public sphere. In French-speaking Africa, evangelical religious radio stations are on the rise. Their programming focuses heavily on preaching the Gospel, reporting on churches, and Christian music. They play an important role within the Church or churches, but also in the public sphere, encouraging the emergence of a common identity and reflection on the major issues of the day. In French-speaking Switzerland, due to the ecumenical and interfaith commitment of the religious programming team and the decline in the legitimacy of the Christian voice within society, RTS Religion's stance leans more toward religious sociology than a Christian view of society. Proof of this can be seen on Sunday evenings with the presence of sociologist Philippe Gonzalez, a specialist in media and religion, rather than a Christian theologian particularly skilled in positioning the Christian faith in a pluralistic context.

Professionalism and boldness more than ever on the agenda

In this collision of diametrically opposed experiences, there is a convergence. On the one hand, African evangelical radio stations are seeking to develop a public discourse that allows them to move away from an exclusively church-centered approach and reach as many listeners as possible, notably by limiting "Jesus" to 30 percent of their programming and giving significant space to development issues and a holistic and integral Gospel (see the Lomé Declaration and the interview with Alphonse Teyabe). On the Swiss side, churches promote—since journalists are employed by the churches and production costs are paid by RTS—a discourse that analyzes religion from Christian perspectives and values, a discourse legitimized by the history of French-speaking Switzerland and by a society that seeks to understand religion without developing any affiliation with any particular denomination.

In these two very different contexts, evangelical journalism has its place. In French-speaking Africa as in Switzerland, it requires professionalism and boldness. It is a matter of breaking out of the well-trodden paths of weak and unarticulated convictions, in order to seek and express a view of the world marked by the values and hope that Christ brings to the heart of our lives. In both cases, this is a real "challenge," as we say today!

Serge Carrel
Journalist in charge of lafree.info
Former journalist at Radio Réveil and on the program Hautes Fréquences on RTS Religion

From January 14 to 18, 2019, Radio Réveil is organizing a training seminar for Christian radio stations in French-speaking Africa in Lomé, Togo.

Thanks to the support of various foundations, the Radio Réveil association is organizing a week of technical, journalistic, and marketing knowledge transfer and exchange for representatives of its partner radio stations and other interested radio stations.

More info