Tag: listeners’ day

  • Listeners’ Day on Radio Romania International

    Listeners’ Day on Radio Romania International

     

    This year, RRI asks you in what way you think AI will change the world. What will the jobs of the future be like? To what extent will we depend on AI? Who and how will have to regulate the use of AI? Which are, in your opinion, the pros and cons of using AI?

     

    We are waiting for your contributions, to include them in our November 3rd show. You can send them by email, to engl@rri.ro, or on Facebook. You can also send audio messages on WhatsApp, at +40744312650, or you can send us your phone number and we will call to record your contribution. Thank you!

  • Listeners’ Day

    Listeners’ Day

    Intro: Those
    of you who in the last decades have been tuning in to Radio Romania
    International…


    Those of you who have sent in their suggestions and
    comments on our programs…


    Those of you who have been sending in reception
    reports on our broadcast…


    Those of you who keep their hopes alive Short-Wave
    broadcast will not fizzle out, will not be discontinued…


    Those of you who are still dead set on tuning in to a
    radio receiver, in the digital era, on a digital planet…


    To ALL
    of you we dedicate this special 2023 edition, occasioned by LISTENER’S DAY
    ON RADIO ROMANIA INTERNATIONAL.


    Welcoming you to the programme
    this year are Daniel Bilt and Eugen Nasta.






    Today’s topic for debate is a very interesting one,
    ‘Climate Change’ which somehow brings to my mind Dickens’ famous line from his
    masterpiece ‘A Tale of Two Cities’, ‘it was the best of times, it was the worst
    of times. It was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch
    of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity’.






    The line seems a great one to me, not because I majored
    in literature but because indeed I believe it is the best of times to address
    such an issue which has already been influencing our lives as human beings and is
    going to affect the generations to come. It is also the worst of times, because
    climate change and global warming reared its ugly head decades ago. It was the
    epoch of belief and the epoch of incredulity all in one, because many people
    nowadays are still denying the phenomenon while others believe that it is not
    man-made.




    Our listener,
    Alan Fenix, from the city of Naga in the Philippines, for instance has
    confessed that at first he refused to see the phenomenon for what it was.
    Quoting from his contribution on the topic:




    1. How
    has climate change influenced me?





    IT MADE ME TO STAY MORE INDOORS THAN OUTDOORS. SPECIALLY, WHEN THE
    TEMPERATURES ARE VERY PUNISHING.





    Initially, I was in denial regarding the genuine existence of climate
    change. I thought it was just another interest group pushing for their own
    agenda.





    However, during the daytime, when the heat is becoming unbearable
    and scorching to the skin, it made me say that, perhaps, climate change is
    real and true and is already with us. So, I make it a point to stay more
    indoors and do activities related to it.




    2. Steps
    to be taken to help reduce greenhouse gas emissions.





    PROPER GARBAGE SEGREGATION AND DISPOSAL. AND, COMING UP WITH A TECHNOLOGY TO
    RECYCLE AND TURN THEM INTO RENEWABLE CLEAN ENERGY.





    For me, climate change goes hand in hand with our societal progress and
    development. It is its direct consequence. Progress and development
    caused climate change. It is the collateral effect of it.





    A concrete example: In a certain rural town, there used to be only two
    public transports providing service in and out of town. In time,
    with progress and development, more and more public transport was put into
    service. Now, there are traffic jams, accidents, smog problems…




    3.
    Individual contribution to reduce carbon footprint.





    SELF DISCIPLINE. No amount of garbage cans or trucks around will help solve and
    reduce our carbon footprint if we are very lazy to even put and segregate
    properly our garbage waste.




    4.
    Education and other platforms.





    Education among our children, youth and adults is only one of the many
    platforms that can be put into use towards spreading the awareness and call to
    action- discipline, discipline, discipline. Among other things, there are
    social media online, on air and print.







    In the end, it is a TIT for TAT*. With progress and development, comes climate
    change. However, we can still do something if we are properly informed,
    educated and disciplined.






    From Halmstad in Sweden, our long time
    contributor and friend Chister Brunstrom has sent in the following audio
    message about climate change.




    AUDIO………………………………………………………………………………






    Bidhan Chandra Sanyal of
    Dhaka Colony in West Begal, India has mentioned the fact that since the end of
    the industrial revolution, in the 19th century, temperature on Earth has kept on rising






    Climate
    change is a very dangerous phenomenon for human society. Since the end of
    the 19th century, the temperature of the Earth’s surface has increased by 0.3
    to 0.60 Celsius. This increase may seem very small to us but it may lead
    to the following disasters.



    Number one – agriculture



    Population
    growth is also increasing the demand for food. As a result, the pressure
    on natural resources is increasing. Climate change will cause changes in
    rainfall and temperature and will directly affect agricultural
    production. In addition, climate change will also have indirect effects on
    soil quality, pest and disease patterns. It is said that the production
    of food grains in India may decrease. Climate extremes such as heavy
    rainfall, high temperatures, floods, droughts etc. will adversely affect crop
    production.




    the weather



    A warmer
    climate will change rainfall patterns, increase the incidence of floods and
    droughts, melt more glaciers and polar ice sheets, and raise sea levels.
    It is said that one of the reasons for the increase in cyclones and hurricanes
    in the last few years is the rise in temperature.



    Swollen sea level



    One of the
    consequences of climate change is the rising sea levels. As a result of
    warming oceans, continued melting of glaciers and polar ice sheets, sea levels
    are expected to rise by half a meter this century. Sea-level rise will
    have adverse effects on coastal areas – land loss due to erosion and
    inundation, increased flooding, saltwater intrusion into residential
    areas. As a result, agriculture in coastal areas will be affected,
    sources of drinking water will be affected, and human settlements, livelihoods
    and health will also be adversely affected.



    People’s health will soon be affected



    Global warming will directly affect human health. Heat-related deaths
    will increase, infectious diseases will spread, dehydration will increase,
    malnutrition will increase, and public health infrastructure will suffer.



    Forests and Wildlife



    Plants and
    animals growing naturally are extremely sensitive to climate change. If
    the rate of climate change continues, many species of plants and animals may
    disappear from the earth.


    Environmental
    conferences in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, in Johannesburg in 2002 and in Kyoto,
    Japan have taken various measures to fully control greenhouse gas emissions




    When I was appointed to do this
    project with my favourite co-worker and friend Eugen, I almost leapt for joy.
    And that’s because among his lifetime hobbies like literature, art and cinema,
    the man is extremely fond of music with an impressive collection of CDs, Vinyl
    records and tapes. Now I am going to test his musical knowledge with a
    question. Eugen, do you remember that old song we used to sing a couple of
    weeks ago, mera joota hei Japani?




    Eugen:
    Of course I remember it…Yeh Patloon Englishtani, Sar pe Laal Topi Roosi, Phir
    Bhi dil hei Hundustani.




    Bill: Like
    I said friends, music is his life. I recalled that song, not only because our
    radio station boasts a huge lot of Indian listeners, but because we are also
    proud to mention the significant community of Japanese RRI listeners. So, from
    Japan, Seiichi Enomoto, of Otsu City, the Shiga Prefecture sent in the following
    contribution on climate change. Quoting from his message.




    Happy Romanian Radio day! I am emailing you about climate
    change and global warming.

    Global warming has caused frequent intensive downpours in Japan this summer.
    The heavy rains have been concentrated in small areas for long periods of time,
    resulting in flooding of homes and landslides. I regret that the heavy use of
    online shopping tends to increase the

    amount of air, truck, and other forms of transportation and use a lot of
    energy. I would like to contribute to the reduction of energy used in
    transportation by not relying on online shopping as much as possible, but
    rather going to local stores to make purchases in person.



    Time now for a well-deserved musical break




    Elena
    Baltagan, known as Ellie White, is a Romanian dance music and trance
    singer-songwriter. Ellie’s ambition to become a solo artist turned out to be a
    good move. Our first musical treat is entitled What’s going to be left of us.




    2023 is set to become the warmest in recorded history,
    warns the EU Copernicus Service, after average temperatures measured around the
    world during the summer and in September have reached the highest levels ever
    recorded. Climate change has triggered not only temperature records, but also
    extreme phenomena: devastating fires, heavy rainfalls, thunderstorms and
    flooding.




    Here is what Johann Hechtl, based in Lengenfeld,
    Austria, thinks, to that effect, QUOTE Climate change is a fact nobody can
    deny, all reputable scientific

    evidence shows that climate is getting warmer at an unprecedented rate

    and getting more extreme. Yet what is missing in many models is the

    significance of human influence on climate. To what extend is humankind

    influencing the climate, 10%, 90%? Depending on that extend, humankind

    will either have to double efforts to counter effects of climate change

    or accept, that climate change has always happened in the past and

    mankind has to adapt. UNQUOTE




    We’ve been
    impressed by the acumen and in-depth knowledge of the topic in the contribution
    sent in by Muhammad Aqeel Bashir, a Pak Listeners Club, Member:
    International Radio Listeners Organization, Pakistan, from which we took
    the liberty to quote




    For me, an email on 2023 Listeners’ Day is relevant,
    important and
    it is an honor. I’d like for these few comments of mine to be included in the
    program, along with everyone else’s opinions on that particular day. Although
    my English is not as strong as that of individuals living in Europe, and I have
    to rely on Google Translate also, but I will do my best to put the thoughts in
    my heart into words. Climate change is one of the most important issues
    confronting our planet today, and it is already having a huge influence on the
    lives of people all over the world.


    How climate change has influenced me:


    Climate change is already having an influence on the
    world, with more extreme weather events, increasing sea levels, and changes in
    precipitation patterns. These consequences disproportionately harm the poorest
    and most vulnerable communities.


    I am concerned about climate change’s effects on
    biodiversity, food security, and human health. I’m also concerned about climate
    change’s potential to aggravate current social and economic inequities. Because
    of the climatic change, I’m having trouble sleeping because it is impossible to
    sleep properly in the summer. As a result, my health is suffering greatly.
    Similarly, in the country where I reside, gas is load-shedding during severe
    winters, which causes me terrible discomfort and impairs my capacity to work.


    Education as an instrument to tackle climate change:
    Education is critical for combating climate change. We must educate people on
    climate change science, its consequences, and what we can do to address it.
    Climate change education can assist to promote awareness, generate support for
    climate action, and empower individuals to make changes in their own lives.


    Platforms to discuss climate change:


    People can discuss climate change on a variety of
    venues, including social media, online forums, and in-person events. It is
    critical to have these venues where individuals can share their experiences,
    learn from one another, and build climate change solutions.


    The role of the media in climate change


    The media has a significant impact on promoting public
    awareness of climate change and affecting public opinion on the subject. Media
    outlets may give accurate and comprehensive news on climate change while also
    promoting solutions.


    I’d want to add that climate change is a complicated
    topic with no simple solutions. It is critical that the climate change debate
    include a wide range of views and opinions. We must also remember that climate
    change is a global issue, and that solutions must be developed and implemented
    on a worldwide scale.


    Education and communication:


    In my opinion, we must educate people on climate
    change science, its consequences, and what we can do to address it. We must
    also provide forums for individuals to discuss climate change and devise
    solutions.


    The media can help to raise awareness of climate
    change and shape public opinion on the subject. However, it is vital to be
    skeptical of the information we receive from the media. We should gather
    information from several sources and create our own opinions regarding its
    authenticity.


    Steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions:


    There are several activities that can be performed at
    both the individual and societal levels to minimize greenhouse gas emissions.


    · Individually,
    we can reduce our carbon footprint by doing the following:


    · Using
    renewable energy sources


    · Driving
    less and more frequently walking, bicycling, or taking public transportation


    · Consuming
    less meats and more plant-based foods


    · We
    must reduce our use of goods and services.


    · Composting
    and recycling


    We must invest in renewable energy, energy efficiency,
    and public transportation at the social level. We must also impose a price on
    carbon emissions and support measures that encourage long-term development.


    I am optimistic that we will be able to work together
    to solve climate change and create a more sustainable future for
    all. Climate change is a major concern, but there is still time to
    respond. We can reduce greenhouse gas emissions, establish a more sustainable future,
    and safeguard people and the earth from the worst effects of climate change by
    working together.




    Romanian traditional music is for, its most part
    lively…It really gets you going!


    Our next musical treat is entitled Get on your feet
    and dance, Hai la joc, in Romanian, performed by one of the most accomplished
    traditional music vocalists, Stefania Rares.




    Brian Roebling, living in New Jersey, USA, was
    more down-to-earth in his contribution, also emphasizing the role education plays
    in climate change


    Dear RRI,


    Climate Change has influenced me to try and cut down
    on my Energy usage. Steps I’ve taken that many people may find easy
    to do; Less Automobile travel, regular car tune ups to maximize fuel
    efficiency. Replacing all incandescent light bulbs with LEDs, lowering the
    thermostat in Winter, and raising it in the Summer. Adding extra
    insulation in the home where possible. Turning down the temperature on the hot
    water heater. Line drying clothes instead of using a clothes dryer. Trying
    to grow vegetables and herbs in a backyard garden, with mixed results.
    Making fertilizer with natural elements, leaves, grass clippings, vegetation,
    etc instead of buying chemical fertilizer.


    Education on any subject, especially climate change
    will hopefully be useful, especially if the info is clear on how each
    individual can do something however small to reduce energy usage. Like
    statistics showing the energy saved if a certain quantity of people lowered the
    heating thermostat by a few degrees. There could be dedicated platforms
    about energy saving, such as tips for the day, tips for certain times of year.
    In terms of the Roles of Mass Media, i think the basic facts, explained in a
    way understandable to people will be helpful. And the avoidance of coverage of
    the climate deniers.




    Jayanta
    Chakrabarty of New Delhi, India is a
    faithful listener to our radio station and sees the global warming and climate
    change as some of the greatest challenges the world is facing nowadays. Quoting
    from his message




    All the
    continents being inter-connected are equally affected by this avoidable
    phenomenon. Yes, education, inequality, healthcare and lifestyle all play
    important role in educating, informing and implementing measures that will save
    our world from imminent disasters like landfalls, heatwaves, forest fires,
    floods, cloud bursts, cyclones, melting of glaciers and rise of ocean water
    levels. Humans, animals, environment and people’s livelihood are at stake.
    Pollution of air and water threatens animal and plant life and human habitat.
    So are the geopolitical and welfare of nations which are in peril. As concerned
    citizens it is our solemn duty to propagate corrective measures. Burning of
    fossil fuel, running coal-based industries and rampant use of private transport
    and affluent way of living are helping to increase the carbon emission. In this
    grave scenario, mass media like the radio has a crucial role to play. Through
    this cheap, convenient and highly effective media we can disseminate useful,
    educative information, issue warnings during natural calamities thus immensely
    aiding in reducing loss of life and property. In fact, media’s attention should
    go beyond the flow of information. It is the onerous duty to convey credible
    and authoritative information backed by scientific research and desist from
    spreading misinformation. Rather it should be the platform to attract general
    public opinion for creating political pressure for change. Today, radio has
    become a powerful tool to communicate information most effectively to billions
    of people at the regional and global levels. However, it’s regrettable that
    despite all the high-level summits on climate change, no significant positive
    change in the sensitivity of the people has been noticed. Radio Romania
    International is doing a yeoman service by informing, acting as watchdog and
    campaigning on social issues that will greatly help in combating the challenge
    of climate change. On this auspicious and happy occasion of Romanian Radio Day
    I would like to convey my sincere felicitations to all members of RRI for their
    stupendous endeavor in making our world a better place to live.




    Mitul
    Kansal, based in Gurgaon, Haryana, India, believes that immediate action is
    need before it’s too late




    Addressing
    climate change and global warming is the need of the hour. Stop, think and act.
    It is time to heal the world.


    When fossil
    fuels are burnt, they release harmful toxins to the atmosphere which impacts
    climate change and causes global warming. Reduce the use of fossil fuel for well-being
    of the planet.


    Within this
    century, climate change could lead to the collapse of a vital ocean current
    system-and it could happen as soon as 2025, according to a study published in
    Nature Communications.


    The media and
    education can play a crucial role in shaping public discourse and bearing
    witness to the climate crisis by providing public interest content for the
    people and communities most affected by climate change, loss and damage and
    environmental exploitation.


    With global
    efforts far off-track to limit global warming and protect people from climate
    impacts, we need accelerated action by governments, businesses and finance
    leaders to cut greenhouse gas emissions and deliver justice for those on the
    frontlines of the climate crisis.


    BEAT THE HEAT




    Xaver
    Hellmayer, of Graeffelfing, Germany sent in an audio message we’re happy to
    include in our special Listener’s Day feature.




    Xavier
    Hellmayer AUDIO (5 min)




    Outro: Fatefully,
    we need to be Procrustian…as time is running short, for us. We’re so sorry to
    put a stop to the 2023 special edition of LISTENER’s DAY on Radio Romania
    International.


    In
    ancient Roman myth and religion, Janus was the god of physical and emotional
    gateways. He is traditionally shown as having two faces pointing in opposite
    directions, representing different perspectives, or perhaps a reconciliation of
    two points of view.


    For us,
    Daniel Bilt and Eugen Nasta, one such face is a well-wishing thought that goes
    something like TO THE VERY BEST OF TIMES!


    The
    other face looks at YOU, our Short-Wave listeners world-wide, and wishes you TO
    THE VERY BEST OF RADIO TIMES!







  • Listeners’ Day on RRI – call for contributions

    Listeners’ Day on RRI – call for contributions


    Dear friends,




    On Sunday, the 5th
    of November 2023, on the first Sunday following the Romanian Radio day which we
    celebrate every year on November 1, we invite you to take part in a special
    programme marking Listeners’ Day on Radio Romania International.




    2023 is set to
    become the warmest in recorded history, warns the EU Copernicus Service, after
    average temperatures measured around the world during the summer and in
    September have reached the highest levels ever recorded. Climate change has
    triggered not only temperature records, but also extreme phenomena: devastating
    fires, heavy rainfalls, thunderstorms and flooding.




    In the 2023
    edition of Listeners’ Day, we ask you whether (and how) climate change has
    influenced you; what steps do you think should be taken to help reduce
    greenhouse gas emissions, and how could each of us contribute to reducing our
    carbon footprint? Do you see education as a useful instrument to tackle climate
    change more efficiently, should there be more platforms to discuss climate
    change? What role do mass media play in this context?




    We are looking
    forward to receiving your answers, which will be included in our show on the 5th
    of November! You can email them to us, at engl@rri.ro, post them on Facebook or
    send them as a comment to this item on RRI’s website at www.rri.ro. You can
    also send us pre-recorded answers on email, via WhatsApp, at +40744.31.26.50,
    or you can send us your telephone number so we can call you from the studio and
    record your opinions.

    Thank you!

  • Listener’s Day on RRI

    Listener’s Day on RRI

    Best wishes on the celebration of November 6. As a listener to your station from as early as the 1970s, I find your broadcast quite unique and enchanting. Now I am very old, nearing ninety. But I never fail to listen to you through my iPad not less than five days a week. To be true for authenticity of news of Europe I listen to you and b.b.c. Your coverage of the Ukrainian war is commendable for it’s unbiased nature. Because of my age, I couldn’t type all my appreciation for your station. It is a pleasure to convey my best wishes to all of you on the Listeners Day and on Radio Romania day on 6 November. Best wishes to you all! Let us pray for the end of war in Ukraine. Lovingly, your very old listener. (Alangiasundaram Vela)

    My family and I live in Kyiv. My family fled to Poland but I decided to stay here. As radio amateur I had ability to listen to all frequencies. I listened to conversations of military aircraft pilots who flew just above my head. I listened to conversations of local radio amateurs, territorial defense and police, and of course, many broadcasting stations on LW, MW and SW bands. Radio Romania was also perfectly audible on short waves. Only a few sources can give an idea of the situation. I received information directly from acquaintances in different parts of the country, read on the Internet in different languages and from different countries. And even Russian propaganda could give some information for comparison. How can you identify fake news from real news? This is very difficult and often not possible at all. But comparing information from different sources and confirming it with people on the ground makes it possible. You can often understand that you hear fake news by the style in which information is presented, by translation errors or inaccurate names. This often depends on the source. There is very little chance of hearing the truth in Russian or from a Russian source. Since my safety directly depends on this, it is very difficult to deceive me lately.However, the beginning of the spread of disinformation can often speak of upcoming events. In conditions where there are power outages, Internet or mobile communications, any receiver with the ability to operate on batteries (including car receivers) and receive on LW, MW and SW can become the only source of information. I have experienced this personally several times. (Volodymyr Gurtovy of Ukraine)

    My main trusted sources of information about the war are the public radio and television, and their websites from the democratic countries mainly in Europe such as BBC of the UK, DLF of Germany, and RRI of Romania. Japan’s NHK is also reliable, but less informative about this war. It is very difficult to correctly identify fake news from real news. Basically, I do not care about information on social media networks, because the information through social media networks may be correct or may be incorrect. In social media networks, the information may be fake. Russia is absolutely to blame for this war, but since we are currently in a state of war, I do not trust any information either from Russia or from Ukraine. Ultimately, I have no choice but to believe information from the democratic countries in Europe. I do not think I am vulnerable to disinformation, but I am not quite sure. So, I try not to simply believe information coming from dictatorial and non-democratic countries. I do not include shady news sources in my list in the first place, but if the source is later found to be fake, I remove it from the list. As I live in Japan, it is difficult for me to realise this war as my own. International radio stations especially those from Europe give me a more vivid picture of this war and broaden my thinking. (Teruhiko Kachi, Japan)

    Radio was and still is my first source of information. I never watch television! But I must add that reading articles online has taken a place that has grown steadily in recent years, especially since the Covid crisis. The consultation of online information sources has continued to grow in importance with the War in Ukraine, if only to look for additional information or to verify what has been heard on the radio. We have to admit that the online machine translation is a great progress: keeping in mind that it is an automatic translation, nevertheless, it is now possible to consult articles written in a language that we do not understand. An infox, by definition, is a false information, propagated if possible massively, in order to mislead readers, listeners or TV-watchers. But the sources propagating Fake News skilfully surround them most often with true information, verifiable because the source is sometimes given. And it is from this moment on that one can become unconsciously vulnerable! Protecting yourself from Fake News requires a real effort consisting not only in diversifying your sources of information but also in verifying the information. And this is where things get complicated because very often, and this is human, each one of us lets himself be locked in his own convictions! Moreover, the verification of information is particularly difficult because very often, the same source – a press agency for instance – is taken up by many media which do not have the possibility of having their own correspondent on the spot. And it is not because a piece of information is duplicated dozens of times that it is reliable. The media machinery is then perceived as a single homogeneous whole, which makes it suspect. Moreover, those who have witnessed an event are often the most critical of the media that report it. More and more citizens are turning away from the media, especially young people, to turn to social networks, which are real sounding boards for fake news. Personally, I don’t use any social network, which decreases my vulnerability and avoids wasting time reading lies! I think that in Romania, as in France and elsewhere, the big media have set up a Checknews, Fact checking, AFP Factual, etc. to detect Fake News. The journalists who work there recommend referring to official sources such as government sources. This is true. But we all know that as far as the Russian-Ukrainian war is concerned, many official sources are lying! For some sociologists, Fact checking is naive and its effectiveness would be very marginal. In war, the first victim is the truth! (…) certain sources of information are in collusion with the authorities in place or with the companies that finance them, directly or through advertising. As a result, the media that citizens trust deliver biased information or deliberately ignore the subjects that make people angry! However, I did not remove any media from my list because there would not be many left! Besides, when I have time, I compare what the media stamped Fake News propagators say about an important event. Indeed, the place that is given to a piece of information in a newspaper, the way of talking about it (the words used), the extracts chosen when a political personality speaks for example, etc. are very revealing of the objectivity, the neutrality, the independence of a media and its journalists. In a democratic country where freedom of the press is normally guaranteed, the media and journalists observe deontological and ethical principles. However, it should not be forgotten that all journalists select, prioritize and draft the information they will present in all journalists select, prioritize and draft the information writing, on the microphone or in front of the cameras. The reporter selects and formats information for an audience of readers or listeners. And for listeners, beyond the words used, the intonation will also be important. So, whether it is true or false, the wording of a statement will strongly influence the way it is perceived by those who receive it. (Paul Jamet, of L’Isle-Adam, France)

    I have been listening to Radio Romania International for many years. Recently in your broadcast you have asked what sources I use for information on the war in Ukraine. Honestly when it comes to reports on any conflict I am sceptical of any information presented. War reports are often affected by the news agencies perspective of the war. However, I have always looked to the BBC world service, although they no longer broadcast on shortwave to North America, so they are a hard catch where I live. Since the beginning of the conflict I have been tuning into your broadcast and Radio Prague and occasionally Radio Slovakia. In the United States there is lots of coverage of the war, however I am more interested in what the neighbouring countries to Ukraine report. I have been listening to shortwave for over 30 years, however international broadcasters in English to North America have been disappearing. I have watched Sky news and France 24, more so at the beginning of the war. And I subscribe to The New York Times, which has been my primary source of information on the war in Ukraine. Many thanks for your broadcasts. (Warren Lambing, USA)

    The year that is drawing to an end will go down in history as the year when humanity got out of the Covid pandemic, but also the year when the bloody conflict in the heart of Eastern Europe started. I believe that later, from the distance of historic perspective, historians will link these two events and will draw conclusions, in a world that will be completely different. Russia’s aggression against Ukraine is taking place against the background of an unprecedented propaganda and disinformation campaign. Here, in Russia, everybody was told to call the war started in February a special operation, under the threat of arrest or even criminal prosecution. Also, the use of the words war and peace are banned, because they discredit the Russian army. And I’m serious, according to the latest laws, adopted by the Russian parliament, it is considered an crime and punished with a big fine, or even imprisonment. I get information about the war from my dear motherland from safe sources – online radio, including the website of Radio Romania International. I can easily distinguish disinformation from real news, so I don’t see myself as vulnerable to disinformation. On the other hand, many people from Russia, and not only, believe in fake news and spread fake news. They could be convinced that they are wrong, but not always, and it can be dangerous, because they have been convinced that what they read and hear every day is true. (Contributor from Ukraine)

    I am glad to participate in 2022 Listeners’ Day. You were asking how I relate with the fake news on Ukraine. I ignore it. And I am not talking only about the news coming from Russia, but also from German sources. Not a single day goes by without an article I find on the internet about some so-called specialists in Russian matters or individuals close to the Kremlin tell us how sick Vladimir Putin is. Or, if he is not sick of cancer or other terminal disease, then the Russian generals are distancing from him, or that the last left in his entourage are leaving him. When I opened my computer 10 minutes ago, I read: Russian expert: Putin will disappear in less than a year. After such a title, it’s clear that the article is a close subject to me. Reading further would be a waste of time. Unfortunately, this is a characteristic of today’s journalism: what the author or what the newspaper, the TV or radio station wants, is presented as reality. There is no research behind it, the facts don’t matter. (..) that is why I resort to serious sources. The most important to me is radio, and here I would like to mention the BBC World Service. In Berlin we are lucky to be able to listen to in on FM. Almost from the very first day of the war, the BBC has had correspondents in all theaters of operation in Ukraine, and also in Moscow. Moreover, Vitaliy Shevchenko from the BBC monitoring service has constantly covered what the Russia media’s been saying about war and debunked it. So, the number one is definitely the radio, the BBC World Service in particular. (Ernst Meinhatdt, Germany)

    I suppose we have been shocked by the brutality of the Russian military aggression against Ukraine. Thousands of people – both soldiers and civilians – have been killed or maimed for life and the country has suffered enormous destruction. It all resembles war crimes not seen in Europe since World War II.

    The media of course play a most important role in informing us about what happens day by day. I get most of my information from the Swedish public service broadcaster – Radio Sweden – and other international radio stations like the BBC, Radio France International and Radio Austria International. Radio Romania International has also been a source of information. These stations all have correspondents in Russia and Ukraine who report on events and the development of the war.

    Public service media always state if their news items have been verified as being correct. If not, they state that it has been impossible to verify the veracity of certain statements or accounts of events. Truth is one of the first victims in a war or conflict. Statements made by Russian government officials can be rejected as they have almost always turned out to be complete false. Russian leaders have excelled in lying to the public both at home and abroad. I don’t really think that I am that vulnerable to disinformation as I stay away from all kinds of social media as they cannot be trusted. In times of crisis the public service radio and TV stations are of paramount importance in providing correct and reliable information and the same goes for those international broadcasters who are free from government control and run by independent journalists (Christern Brunström, Sweden)

    I am one that does not listen too close to news that is happening in our country or internationally. In our country the news is usually what our government wants us to hear. It’s not that i do not care, but I can not do anything about it. It hurts me when I do hear something such as the war going on in the Ukraine and the refugees fleeing to other countries. There is also the aliens from South American countries crossing illegally into our country. I am not happy with our government with the way it is being run. There is a lot of things happening out there which I do not agree with. I can’t identify the fake news from the real. I do not hear from reliable sources. I do listen to your station Radio Romania Int. often. I enjoy the English language transmissions.I have been a short-wave listener since 1963. I know how great short-wave listening used to be. (Larry Nelson, US)

  • Listeners’ Day on Radio Romania International

    Listeners’ Day on Radio Romania International




    Sunday, the 7th of November 2021, will be Listeners’ Day on
    Radio Romania International, celebrated a week after the Romanian Radio Day marked on the 1st of November. 2021,
    just like the previous year, has been affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, which has
    profoundly changed our lives, keeping us apart from family and friends and influencing
    our way of spending free time.


    Bombarded with all sort of news and information, we realised that it is
    sometimes difficult to distinguish between true and false stories. During the
    pandemic, public radio and TV stations have been doing their best to offer
    quality journalism and reliable information. This effort has been repaid, as
    most people have returned to public stations as their main source of reliable
    information.


    In this year’s edition of
    Listeners’ Day on RRI we ask you, again, what has been your most trusted source
    of information on the pandemic? Have you removed from your list the sources of
    information proven to be spreading fake news and misinform the public? Which is
    the role that radio, the public radio in particular, plays in your life at this
    time of uncertainty?


    We
    are looking forward to receiving your answers, which will be included in our
    shows on the 7th of November! You can email them to us, at engl@rri.ro, post them on Facebook or
    send them as a comment to this article on RRI’s website at www.rri.ro. If you like, you can also
    send us pre-recorded answers via WhatsApp, at +40744312650, or you can send us
    your telephone number so we can call you from the studio and record your
    opinions. Thank you!





  • Listener’s Day 2018

    Listener’s Day 2018

    Dear RRI staff members, Let me join the celebration of Listeners’ Day. When I first listened to overseas radio stations, the whole world was different from what it is now. It was hard to reach communist countries, both physically and mentally. Shortwave broadcast made it possible for all the people to learn about those countries. I was very young at that time and was open to all sorts of ideas. I was lucky that I had a shortwave radio to get information from every corner of the world. Thus I developed my attitude toward intercultural communication. 40 years after that, I am working as Dean of Graduate School of Global Communication and Language at Akita International University in Japan, which has a partner institution in Romania and some exchange students from it. I owe much to shortwave broadcast for what I am now. Although IT technologies have been developing to replace existing media, I believe radio broadcast will never lose its function. IT technologies depend too much on the networking systems, and they may face fatal breakdowns in unexpected natural disasters. I hope the world will not forget how important and effective radio broadcast is. Once again, let me celebrate the Listeners’ Day. (Hiroki Uchida, Okutsubskidai, Tsubakigawa, Japan)




    (…) congratulations on the 90th anniversary of official radio broadcast in your country. I started listening to shortwave stations almost 40 years ago, 50 years later than start of the official broadcast in Romania. I remember receiving Radio Bucharest by chance when I was a teenager, turning the tuning dial of my old Panasonic portable receiver, and being excited at the moment I caught the interval signal for the first time. I didn’t understand what was said in the programs in English, but that really brings back memories. Listening to radio broadcasts had been just one of my hobbies for many years, until I started working for the radio monitoring organization under the Foreign Affairs Ministry in Tokyo, where I kept listening to news and commentaries from North Korean national stations for a decade. They were completely different from those of our country. At least they were not means to give exact information to people living there, but to control them ideologically. There I learned that such kind of broadcast sometimes could be a small opened window to make an inference about what was going on in the country, what was important issues to the party and the government, and what leaders of the closed society thought about. To me it was the object of analysis at that time.(Actually I heard the company once used to have some staffs to monitor East European radio stations decades ago.)After I quit the job, listening to the radio became my hobby again. But thanks to the experience, I can enjoy listening to news and commentaries which might be boring to some, whether they come from communist countries or not. Of course I like music played on the shortwave radio, too, even better than songs played on the internet media. Radio has been essential to my life anyway. These days shortwave broadcasts are being discontinued in many countries. But I think your station is important to all of shortwave listeners around the world. I sincerely hope RRI remain in the shortwave bands for many years to come. ( Masahiro Kobayashi, Kawaguchi, Japan)




    Thanks for telling us about the 90th anniversary of the first official radio broadcast in Romania. Congratulations and best wishes to radio Romania for your great achievement. Nowadays most radio stations are stopping their broadcasts, while you are moving forward at full swing, which is great, and a gift. I am feeling proud to be your listener. Radio plays a very important role in society. It is touching everybody’s life in places where there are no means of communication, and radio signals come and change people’s lives. I have been listening to radio from my childhood days, that is, about 1983 -84, and I continue to do so. I am listening mainly to short wave broadcasts of foreign radio stationsin order to find out about far away, unknown country. Radio is the way to get there and learn traditional culture, history and society. I am very happy to know everything about a country where I could not go, and it is almost free of cost. Various radio station are organizing quiz contests from time to time, and I am actively participating in those contest through radio, in order to increase my knowledge about other countries, and win some valuable prize which are not available on the market.I have won two international radio quiz contests so far, and been awarded visits to China and Indonesia free of cost. Now I want to win the Romanian trip prize, it is very valuable to me, and hope it will happen shortly. (SB Sharma, Jamshedpur, Jharkand)




    Warm wishes on the occasion of 90th anniversary of Romania’s first official Radio broadcast, and happy listener’s day to all at RRI and the larger worldwide listener’s diaspora of RRI….Radio is my life. I have a dedicated corner in my home for all my radios. Of course listening to RRI broadcast daily is a real delight and fun. It gives all the information about Romania and the world also includes art, music and culture, making the broadcast the most comprehensive. This time the RRI’s celebration of Listener’s day is special one because it is the 90th anniversary of first official radio broadcast. All these years, RRI is serving the listener’s community without fail. And I am hopeful that it will continue to do so. RRI is always updating itself with new technologies to keep pace with the new world order and new generation of listeners. I am really grateful to RRI to be with us during these test times where digitization is taking over everything. I want to share one incidence where one of my students asked -sir, is radio a dying medium?


    And my answer was this…….


    I would rather say it is an evolving medium. Ask any passionate radio listener, they will say FM Band is not true Radio in its Spirit. In reality, Radio is Shortwave. Where you catch far away radio stations. This passion for radio lasts for ever. The peace and joy radio hobbyist get is beyond explanation.New technology like DRM (Digital Radio Mondiale) which transmit digital signals rather then analogue signals of good old radio (however, I don’t like digitization). At present DRM radio receivers are expensive, maybe because there are few manufacturers. Radio stations are leaving shortwave band because running radio stations over the shortwave is expensive and people are now have more and more access to online content. I want to add one more thing- Whatever technology may come, radio can’t die. There are nations who suppress the news content and freedom of expression. Media in these nations don’t allow freedom of press. Analogue radio is the only mean to spread the information in these areas. long love radio… long live RRI… ( Mahesh Jain, Dwarka, Delhi, India)




    Congratulations & Happy 90th Anniversary to Radio Romania International. Radio enables us to listen to it any time anywhere – at home, at work, as we exercise, or as we drive in our cars. Other Medias like TV and Internet requires special attention and time to use. It is due to the fact that radio relies only on one sense, called hearing. Whereas other Medias require both ear and eyes. Radio is still the most accessible, reactive and engaging medium there is, informing and transforming us, through news, entertainment and audience participation. Radio also has abilities or skills that other media cannot match. The connection formed between the broadcaster and the audience is beyond any comparison. I experienced this many a time, whenever listener’s letters are read out in any radio program, the broadcaster calls out the listeners by their names. This kind of personal touch radio has, which is not present in any other media – be it TV or the Internet. Moreover, radio increases the imaginative power of listeners because the listeners create an image in mind of whatever is said over the radio. What makes Radio more popular is its ability to reach masses across the globe and all the news, views, information and knowledge without any significant cost. This is the reason why international broadcasters use Radio and particularly shortwave radio to broadcast in the most troubled regions of the world, like Afghanistan, Somalia, Pakistan, Darfur, North Korea. These are the regions which suppress human rights and freedom of speech. Therefore, in the dissemination of correct information and news, Radio does a wonderful job. It is sad that gradually the major international broadcasters have shut down its various language services and shining their presence over the shortwave spectrum. Some others have fully left shortwave radio. You are also left the shortwave. But I am hopeful that you will continue with us and carry on your strong presence in the radio in Social media. (S.M. Najim Uddin, International DX Radio Listeners Club, West Bengal, India)




    Radio is an inseparable companion of my life. Already in my childhood I listened to the sounds coming from my parents’ radio receiver. I really liked listening to foreign radio stations that broadcast interesting music. Although I did not understand anything because I did not speak foreign languages, music did not create such a barrier. As an adult, I returned to listening to radio on medium and short waves in 2013. Then I discovered Radio Romania International. Just like in childhood, now I listen to beautiful music on the waves of your radio station.I play hammered dulcimer with passion. My grandfather before the Second World War was an outstanding hammered dulcimer player in Vilnius. Now I continue this family tradition. On the occasion of your anniversary, I am sending you a musical gift in the form of a melody played by me on hammered dulcimer. I made the recordings in my home. It is Blue Waltz, a folk melody from the beginning of the 20th century.I wish you all the best. (Piotr Krupski, Elblag, Poland)




    Dear RRI English section, Firstly I would like to congratulate RRI on its 90th anniversary in regards to your first radio broadcast. Radio has played a big role in my life which I have enjoyed since owning my first radio at the age of 8 in 1983, discovering a whole new world of music and information at the slide of a switch mainly listening to the BBC. I did not discover short wave until the 1990s with a later radio and began to find many interesting world radio programmes, especially broadcasts by RRI, and it is still a pleasure to listen to your broadcast, however, I now tend to listen to RRI on the internet. I believe there is a future for radio broadcasts as there will always be an interest in other cultures. I believe radio will have a good future on various websites that will get mentioned on programmes on where to find broadcast archives and where to listen live such as sites like www.tunein.com and www.radio360.eu I have had some great memories of entering competitions and receiving gifts from world radio stations. Radio to me has a more personal touch than other media sources such as TV or films where it is more rare to talk with those people involved at a personal level. (Alastair Pamphilon, Whitnash, Warwickshire)



    As one of your regular listeners, I am very glad to respond to your 90th anniversary request for accounts of radio in our lives. I have lived all my life in Newfoundland, which is in eastern Canada, stuck out into the North Atlantic Ocean, and a very good place for hearing radio from nearly the whole world. I am now 66 years old and every day I still listen to radio of almost all sorts: local broadcast radio here in Newfoundland; national radio in Canada; broadcast stations from near and far local areas; international broadcasts via short-wave radio; and many local and podcasty radio stations via my Internet radio set. I am not really a dedicated DX-er but I certainly do enjoy the thrill of hearing a station that is meant for a local audience thousands of kilometers from me! Today, too, I enjoy being able to hear the modern digital shortwave broadcast system, DRM, of which – as you know – RRI is a leading user. One of my earliest memories is of radio. When I was a very small child, still unable to speak, I often lay on the kitchen counter-top as my mother did housework like cooking, washing and ironing. She – like me now – always had the radio on, and very clearly I remember being puzzled by an announcer one day saying that each performer was now stepping up to the mike to perform popular songs. I was old enough to think that he could not be telling the truth, that he was just playing records. But there was a magic in that idea, something that I think underlies my continued interest in radio. As a young adult, in university, I was still so much influenced by that magic of radio that I wrote two theses, my master’s and my doctoral thesis, on radio topics, investigating local radio in my own community in the decades before I was born. Today, my wife and I both like being able to move from room to room and continue listening to the radio programme we were hearing in another room. Thus, our house has at least one radio in every room. As I write these words, I am nearly surrounded at my desk by radios for various broadcasts. Now that I am retired from my job, I have also rekindled an interest from my childhood – how radios work, and especially older ones. So, next to my desk is my latest project – a 1950s-era German Südfunk radio, a four-tube set with piano-key buttons and an amber-lit-glass frequency-tuning scale on the front. Whenever I have a couple of hours to spare, I open it up and do a little tinkering. I look forward to the day when it will work again, when I can tune in and listen to my favourite shortwave stations, like, say, RRI.Congratulations on your 90th anniversary! I have listened to Radio Bucharest, now RRI, for many years but you’d already been broadcasting for nearly a half century when I started! I still have notes that I took on your broadcasts just over forty years ago, in March 1978, when I heard your broadcasts on 11940 kHz and a few evenings later on 7195 kHz. Today I enjoy RRI for many reasons. I cannot see radio diminishing in its importance to the millions of people who listen. It will certain *change* with technological, cultural, and political changes. I hope that one of these changes is not the elimination of national services like the RRI. We see the diminishment of national services in most Western countries, yet they cling to life. And all it will take is a new generation that appreciates the common wealth, wealth for all citizens, that is to be found in national services; I suspect that new generation is already starting to vote! (Philip Hiscock, St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada)



    Hello. My name is Carrie Hooper and I come from Elmira, New York, USA. I am totally blind. Radio has always played an important role in my life. I am a pianist and singer. From an early age, listening to the radio helped me gain an appreciation for a wide variety of music, everything from classical music to classic rock, from country to old popular standards. I also grew up listening to programs on national public radio. When I studied for my Master’s in German and my Master’s in music at the University at Buffalo in Buffalo, New York, listening to classical 94.5 WNED made writing term papers easier. I got my first shortwave radio in high school and enjoyed listening to BBC World Service. I also discovered stations from other countries. Radio has not only served as a music teacher and a source of news and information. It has also helped me in my study of foreign languages. When I studied German, I listened to shortwave broadcasts from Deutsche Welle and HCJB, the Voice of the Andes from Quito, Ecuador. When I learned Italian, I listened to RAI on shortwave. When I studied Swedish, I listened to Radio Sweden in Swedish and in English. The English service of Radio Sweden broadcast a program called In Touch With Stockholm which gave listeners the opportunity to talk to Swedes about any topic they wished. Their conversations were included in the program. I wanted to talk to a blind student from Sweden because I wanted to know what life was like for a blind person there. Radio Sweden put me in touch with Ulrika Norelius, a blind music student at the Royal University College of Music in Stockholm, Sweden. We spoke on the telephone and our conversation was broadcast on the air. Ulrika and I stayed in touch and she told me about a guest student program at the university at which she studied. I applied for this program because I wanted to learn more about Swedish music and culture. I applied for a Fulbright scholarship to finance my studies. The music conservatory in Stockholm accepted me and I also received a Fulbright scholarship to study there for one year. In a way, Radio Sweden made it possible for me to study in Sweden. Ten years ago I began learning Albanian. My friend Tim Hendel recorded Albanian language radio programs from the Internet and shortwave from Radio Tirana, Vatican Radio, and Radio Maria. He continues to record Albanian programs from Vatican Radio and CHIN in Toronto, Canada. He sends me cassettes with these programs. When I began learning Spanish, Tim began recording Spanish language programs from various stations including Radio Romania International. The Spanish service of Radio Romania International offers Romanian lessons once a week. While visiting Tim, I heard one of these lessons and that inspired me to learn Romanian. Tim taught me some basic vocabulary and grammar. He took Romanian at Columbia University in New York when he studied for his Master’s in Romance Filology. He recorded the Romanian lessons from the Spanish and English programs and he also recorded programming for me from the Romanian service of Radio Romania International. I used material from Romanian lessons from the Spanish service when I taught Romanian to an American whose wife is Romanian. Recently my parents received an Amazon Echo so I can listen to Radio Romania International at any time. Is there a future for radio broadcasting? Absolutely. In today’s world, people have access to numerous sources of information and not all of the information they read or hear is true. Also, we live in a world polarized by hate and fear. Therefore, radio programs that inform and promote cultural understanding are more important than ever. Congratulations to Radio Romania on ninety years of service. Thank you for your excellent programs that paint an audio portrait of Romania. Radio Romania International offers information about current events and culture that you would not hear on US radio stations. Thank you again and keep up the great work. (Carrie Hooper, Elmira, New York)



    Congratulations on your 90th Anniversary! Radio for me started as a hobby back in 2011 when I bought a SW radio, and listened to my first shortwave broadcast. As time went by it became more than just a hobby. It has become a window into other countries, their people, their cultures, and their history. This is especially true of Radio Romania International. I’ve always been fascinated with Eastern Europe but in the mainstream press and TV in the USA you don’t have a lot of articles or shows with context devoted to this area. RRI fills this gap with one of the best Shortwave Radio programs still being broadcast. I feel like RRI is a friend whom I care about. I’ve learned about Romania’s history, culture, people, it’s concerns and dreams for the future. The future of Shortwave Radio appears to be bleak with many stations going off the air or switching content to on line access only. The younger generations don’t appear to have an interest in SW or radio in general, plus its expensive to broadcast on SW. I fear that in 10 years or so Shortwave will no longer be broadcast from RRI. That’s such a shame as there is something very special tuning in and hearing the interval signal of RRI and then listening live to the broadcasts daily, and weekly. It gives you a connection to the Country that on line content doesn’t provide. I will continue to listen until SW is a thing of the past which I hope doesn’t happen. Thank you RRI for your excellent programs! (John P. Cooper, Lebanon, Pennsylvania)



    Hello my friends at RRI! As a first generation American of German immigrants, I knew the ability of hearing different news and information from other points around the world would be interesting. When I was 9 years old (in 1966), I got a shortwave receiver kit as a present. It was the Heathkit GR-64. After it was built, I began to listen to broadcasts from the BBC, Deutsche Welle, Radio Moscow, Havana Cuba, Radio China, and VOA. I found it fascinating that the world news I heard from our national TV network stations had a very different spin or point of view than the same information from the other countries, even the VOA version. At 9 years old I realized I had to consider several points of view from different cultures to learn the full truth. Broadcasts from RRI and others also bring a welcome addition to supply more information (propaganda from some stations) but also a bit of the country’s culture with opinions, music, and events. The on the air answering of listener’s questions that were sent in are of particular interest. It was clear then and still today that basic AM radio shortwave broadcasts are the simplest, easiest and a low cost way to connect with most people around the globe. All that exposure led me down the path to become a Radio Amateur Operator in 1973. Today, I continue to listen to numerous AM Shortwave broadcasts as well as having great conversations with hundreds of radio operators around the world. This makes the earth feel very small and makes me realize that allpeople are basically the same no matter where we live. It’s a radio-family. My best to RRI for the 90th anniversary and all the other radio listening brothers and sisters. Peace and good health! (Joe Roth, Williamsburg, Virginia)



    Every one has crazy goals in his or her life – at least two of mine has become a reality. The first one on a bright summer day 11 years ago, when I dipped my hand in the water of the Black Sea as a most lucky winner of a RRI contest. For Central Europeans it might be a wish to have a look out over the Atlantic Ocean , for me it was a goal to dip my hand in the Black Sea. Thanks to RRI and Romania it became possible. The second was to experience the fall of the iron curtain. Well I had been at the NGO-conference connected to the UN-Population conference in Bucharest in the 70th. I participated in the church service with a lot of nicely dressed men among us. At Christmas time 1989 I listened to the frequencies of Radio Bucharest as much as I could. Even in Romanian language you could sense the dramatic events take place. I heard the iron curtain fall. Born in 1948 I had a childhood with out TV, but with radio. The whole family listened to the news twice daily. Home from school I listened to children’s programs. I still remember some of the radio dramas. Jules Verne was my favorite. He brought me in my fantasy first time to Romania. As a child turning the dial, when my father was lot along, I was fascinated by the many different languages, music styles and sounds coming to my ears. One day I did catch a program on MW in Danish, that lead me to SW, and from the beginning I was deeply fascinated by SW. That you can catch the waves from a transmitter on the other side of the globe – I still find it much more fascinating than internet. Then I was hooked on SW – I think as low as I live – or as long as SW will exist. When you are 70 you might not have goals more, but hopes – with out hopes you die! On my personal account I hope one day to visit the Danube Delta on more than a daytrip! For the World – that it will an easier and freer life for ordinary Citizens. I am aware that free press and open radios are one of the important factors for a human society. I wish Radio Romania many more fruitful years! Best and warmest wishes! (Hans Verner Lollike, Hedehusene, Denmark)



    Thanks fro the invitation and greetings to all of you and to the listeners, especially those friends of mine around the globe listening to RRI.Boy, has radio been part of my life! Since around 1960-62 that I started listening daily, including to RRI on MW and SW. Before that, I used to try to explore our Philips tabletop enchanted by the mystery of radio.It has been an important part of me because I could hear the news from different points of view and then form an education view and opinion, hear about the customs, music, history and food of so many countries. I will never forget the aggressive propaganda of some East European countries of many years ago, the beautiful music from Radio Japan and Radio New Zealand International during some sleepless nights or the beautiful Christmas Eve program from Radio Australia in 1999. I haven’t had a dull moment when listening to international radio stations, even during those days of bad reception and interference and disappearing signals!Listening has influenced my life in that along the way I learnt about radio repairs and electronics and I made some life long friendships from many countries, both listeners and radio personnel, the announcer of the former RRI Greek broadcast knows that – is she listening?Sadly, I am not sure about the future. Listeners are disappearing, companies are not making anymore radios, governments try to save money by hitting the international broadcasts, listeners don’t send it reports and customs change.I wish RRI happy birthday, stay on for long time and keep improving. (Fotios Padazopulos)



    Radio is still important, at least in my life. I can know and learn something new and what’s happening in another country outside my country. I can know and learn a culture from other country via the radio. Radio has played a great role in my life in order to get to know something, be it culture, customs, news from other countries, to develop a better understanding toward another country.

    It is true that radio has been in great decline recently, but it does not mean no people will listen to the radio. Radio is still greatly needed for the people who live in area where there is no internet access. I think radio has hope in the future. As long as the human being still exists, radio will be needed. It is wrong to claim that radio is not needed anymore because there is internet access. People who live in conflict areas and have no internet access will find that radio is a great source of information for them. Radio can entertain them too. Some big international radio stations have closed their broadcast, but some smaller radio stations still broadcast today. Whenever there is radio, there are people who will still listen. Long live radio! (Alex Torbeni, Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia)



    Dear Friends at Radio Romania International. I started listening to shortwave radio in 1965 when I built, with the help of a high school friend who was studying electronics, a Knight-Kit Star Roamer shortwave radio. As a 16 year-old I was working at a local commercial medium wave radio station in a small town in Florida and had finally scraped up enough money to buy the kit. I’ve been listening, using a number of other shortwave receivers, ever since. This experience, and an insatiable curiosity about the entire RF spectrum, led me not only to 30 years as an amateur radio operator but also to a 30-year career as a feature writer and columnist for many magazines, including 25 years at Monitoring Times where, when the magazine folded in 2013, I was the managing editor. Immediately following that I was inspired to start my own monthly magazine covering the entire radio spectrum, called The Spectrum Monitor, which is just now finishing its fifth year of publication. Congratulations to Radio Romania International on the 90thanniversary of the first official radio broadcast in Romania. At a time when so many international shortwave broadcasters have left the shortwave bands, it is indeed a major accomplishment. That Radio Romania International has not only refused to quit, but has also pioneered new technologies in international broadcasting by being the only European shortwave station regularly heard in the US using the digital format Digital Radio Mondiale, is testimony to RRI’s commitment to the future of international broadcasting. May you enjoy another 90 years on the air! (Ken Reitz)



    “Radio is the best and cheapest means of communication and information having easy access to the world audience . It is within the reach of everyone – whether she/he is rich or poor , big or small , child , youth or old at very little cost . Radio is connecting to ‘ UNCONNECTED ‘ and reaching to ‘ UNREACHABLE ‘ anywhere , anytime in the whole world . Radio plays an vital role in case of emergency , war , flood , earthquake , disaster and spreading diseases and virus. It connects with the victims via its trained representatives and sends victims requirements to the government. In this way it saves lives . Radio is the voice of people , by the people and for the people. Misuse of this amazing tool of connecting , information and communication would be dangerous for the present and coming generations. It is the matter of great sorrow in the age of internet , our present young generation does not know the magic of radio . Therefore , there is a need to connect this our generation with radio . In this case social media , schools , NGO’s can play an vital role . I am a regular listener to RRI and I am very much interested in Romanias culture, history, art, customs, traditions and way of life. I fully believe that RRI is bringing Romania closer to us through its programs, website and various contests. (Mitul Kansal, India)


  • LISTENER’S DAY

    LISTENER’S DAY

    On November 1st, 2018, we celebrate the 90th anniversary of the first official radio broadcast in Romania. We are celebrating 90 years of documenting history, when radio professionals have kept the public informed, reflecting every stage of events as they occurred, from the interwar period, World War II, the post-war period, as well as the decades of communism and Cold War.



    It documented the December 1989 spectacular collapse of the communist regime, then the transition to democracy in Romania. Since then, listening to the radio in itself has changed dramatically, going from the vacuum tube wireless receiver of your grandparents to radio received on a smart-phone or a smart speaker.



    Radio Romania International is the voice that has been telling the story of Romania and explained events as they occurred. This year, on Listeners Day, we would like you to share with us and all our listeners what the role of radio is in your life, and what RRI means to you.



    We will be including in our programs a selection of your answers. You can send them by e-mail at engl@rri.ro, on Facebook, or using the dedicated form on our website, www.rri.ro.

  • 2016 Listener’s Day on RRI

    2016 Listener’s Day on RRI

    The happiest people are those who think the most interesting thoughts. Those who decide to use leisure as a means of mental development, who love good music, good books, good pictures, good company, good conversation, are the happiest people in the world. And they are not only happy in themselves, they are the cause of happiness in others.


    Mittul Kansal, India



    Dear RRI, Where do the happiest people live? This is quite an interesting question and the answer is far from obvious. Existing rankings try to measure variables like incomes, health services, education, life expectancy and security. However, happiness is so much more; it’s a feeling that can be shared by rich or poor wherever they live. It is undoubtedly a lot easier to feel happy if you don’t have to worry about your economy or your health. True happiness is a strong feeling of satisfaction with your life and the people who surround you. It’s when you wake up each morning to a new day of pleasurable work and other activities. In fact, it is an attitude to life generally. Many people find happiness in a religious context when you rely on a loving God to take care of all your problems or anxieties. As far as I know the kingdom of Bhutan is the world’s only country to measure the degree of happiness as part of the nation’s development process.


    Christer Brunström, Sweden



    Dear friends! I have both seen on the internet and heard on the radio about this years Listeners Day! I must compliment you for choosing an important theme. “Where do the happiest people live? Denmark has many times been on the top together with the other Scandinavian countries in surveys concerning the luckiest people in the world, but generally I am not sure that we are luckier than other people of other nationalities. You get the answers you ask for!!! If you ask for free education, free hospitals, free schools, social benefits, daily security in home and job, high employment – no doubt Scandinavian countries will be on the top of the list. We have a rich society and relatively high feeling of security and solidarity among people, even that we are still lacking total equality between the sexes in payment possibilities to be promoted. Do two candidates have the same qualifications for a job, the man will get it. We are not a Hollywood-country, where you just have to hold out your hand, and banknotes fall into them. You have to work for life, you have to study hard to get an exam, you have to do your best to get a job. I think to be happy is a very individual feeling. It cannot be arranged, it cannot be bought, it cannot be given as a gift. It is something that comes to you as pearl, that goes into your memory box: A word, a day of sunshine, a big hug, an observation of children playing, a field filled with blooming daffodils, a person you love, a family that care. For me personally I could not explain happiness without my Christian faith, where it is obvious that everything in life is a gift. I remember seeing a small theatre play! It was about a man. He had everything in a luxury life. Just a word and he got what he wished to have: Drinks, beautiful ladies, entertainment, a new big swimming pool, but he became more and more bored, and at last he called his servants: If life is so boring, I wish I was in hell! The servant answered: “Where do you think you are?


    Hans Verner Lollike, Denmark



    “I think the happiest people live everywhere. I have lived in many places across the US and I’ve found happiness in each place I’ve lived. Each place has been unique and different so there was always something to enjoy about it. What makes me happy where I live? The fact I’ve got a good boss who respects me and treats me well and the people in town village I live in are genuinely nice people. Of course, a nice meal after a long day at work also helps in making me happy too!! 🙂


    Paul Walker, USA



    The key to a happy life is having family and friends close by. This is what makes a place feel like home. With a family network nearby you have a willing helpful network who will lend you a missing ingredient when you are cooking, look after children when they are very young and parents when they are elderly. Unfortunately, it is harder and harder to experience this happiness in our modern world. Many families have members abroad. And yet the spirit of this home lives on in our hearts. We share it when we are in touch across the miles.


    Jonathan Murphy, Ireland



    “Hello Radio Romania team, I am very excited about the 2016 Listener Day. I listen to your one hour program daily on my Tecsun PL660 on 11825 khz on 3:00 UTC on my QTH Delhi. This time you have come up with a very good question: “Where do the happiest people live?


    We in east think that western countries are the places where the happiest people live. India and other developing and poor nations are struggling for development. People here struggle for daily bread. The inner peace and happiness is thus counted by the money you possess. So here our perception of happiness is money and material happiness. But I think the word “happiness constitute more than being rich and monetary possessions. That is why many people from west are looking for inner peace and happiness in the east by devoting themselves to spirituality.


    From my point of view, happiness is self-sufficiency. If people are self-reliant and satisfied in whatever they have then the people of that area will be most happy. I firmly believe that the self-reliant community will not compare what I have and what others have. This will bring eternal happiness. No comparison, No tension in mind to have the things which others have.


    Mahesh Jain, India

  • 2016 Listener’s Day on RRI

    2016 Listener’s Day on RRI

    The happiest people are those who think the most interesting thoughts. Those who decide to use leisure as a means of mental development, who love good music, good books, good pictures, good company, good conversation, are the happiest people in the world. And they are not only happy in themselves, they are the cause of happiness in others.


    Mittul Kansal, India



    Dear RRI, Where do the happiest people live? This is quite an interesting question and the answer is far from obvious. Existing rankings try to measure variables like incomes, health services, education, life expectancy and security. However, happiness is so much more; it’s a feeling that can be shared by rich or poor wherever they live. It is undoubtedly a lot easier to feel happy if you don’t have to worry about your economy or your health. True happiness is a strong feeling of satisfaction with your life and the people who surround you. It’s when you wake up each morning to a new day of pleasurable work and other activities. In fact, it is an attitude to life generally. Many people find happiness in a religious context when you rely on a loving God to take care of all your problems or anxieties. As far as I know the kingdom of Bhutan is the world’s only country to measure the degree of happiness as part of the nation’s development process.


    Christer Brunström, Sweden



    Dear friends! I have both seen on the internet and heard on the radio about this years Listeners Day! I must compliment you for choosing an important theme. “Where do the happiest people live? Denmark has many times been on the top together with the other Scandinavian countries in surveys concerning the luckiest people in the world, but generally I am not sure that we are luckier than other people of other nationalities. You get the answers you ask for!!! If you ask for free education, free hospitals, free schools, social benefits, daily security in home and job, high employment – no doubt Scandinavian countries will be on the top of the list. We have a rich society and relatively high feeling of security and solidarity among people, even that we are still lacking total equality between the sexes in payment possibilities to be promoted. Do two candidates have the same qualifications for a job, the man will get it. We are not a Hollywood-country, where you just have to hold out your hand, and banknotes fall into them. You have to work for life, you have to study hard to get an exam, you have to do your best to get a job. I think to be happy is a very individual feeling. It cannot be arranged, it cannot be bought, it cannot be given as a gift. It is something that comes to you as pearl, that goes into your memory box: A word, a day of sunshine, a big hug, an observation of children playing, a field filled with blooming daffodils, a person you love, a family that care. For me personally I could not explain happiness without my Christian faith, where it is obvious that everything in life is a gift. I remember seeing a small theatre play! It was about a man. He had everything in a luxury life. Just a word and he got what he wished to have: Drinks, beautiful ladies, entertainment, a new big swimming pool, but he became more and more bored, and at last he called his servants: If life is so boring, I wish I was in hell! The servant answered: “Where do you think you are?


    Hans Verner Lollike, Denmark



    “I think the happiest people live everywhere. I have lived in many places across the US and I’ve found happiness in each place I’ve lived. Each place has been unique and different so there was always something to enjoy about it. What makes me happy where I live? The fact I’ve got a good boss who respects me and treats me well and the people in town village I live in are genuinely nice people. Of course, a nice meal after a long day at work also helps in making me happy too!! 🙂


    Paul Walker, USA



    The key to a happy life is having family and friends close by. This is what makes a place feel like home. With a family network nearby you have a willing helpful network who will lend you a missing ingredient when you are cooking, look after children when they are very young and parents when they are elderly. Unfortunately, it is harder and harder to experience this happiness in our modern world. Many families have members abroad. And yet the spirit of this home lives on in our hearts. We share it when we are in touch across the miles.


    Jonathan Murphy, Ireland



    “Hello Radio Romania team, I am very excited about the 2016 Listener Day. I listen to your one hour program daily on my Tecsun PL660 on 11825 khz on 3:00 UTC on my QTH Delhi. This time you have come up with a very good question: “Where do the happiest people live?


    We in east think that western countries are the places where the happiest people live. India and other developing and poor nations are struggling for development. People here struggle for daily bread. The inner peace and happiness is thus counted by the money you possess. So here our perception of happiness is money and material happiness. But I think the word “happiness constitute more than being rich and monetary possessions. That is why many people from west are looking for inner peace and happiness in the east by devoting themselves to spirituality.


    From my point of view, happiness is self-sufficiency. If people are self-reliant and satisfied in whatever they have then the people of that area will be most happy. I firmly believe that the self-reliant community will not compare what I have and what others have. This will bring eternal happiness. No comparison, No tension in mind to have the things which others have.


    Mahesh Jain, India

  • LISTENERS’ DAY November 1, 2015

    LISTENERS’ DAY November 1, 2015


    Hans Verner Lollike, Denmark


    “Last year we made holiday in the city of Weimar in Germany. As we always do, we did also visit the churches, that is open to guests and tourists. In one of the churches a rather old lady was one of the volunteers, that looked after the church. As we got to talk, she told us that she was born in Kaliningrad (Königsberg), and her mother fled with the children, they ended up in Copenhagen, Denmark, as 100,000 other Germans in the last days of the war. She told us, that her mother died in the refugee camp, lying in a mass grave in Copenhagen. We did feel bad, because we know, that the German refugees after WWII in Denmark were not treated with love, kept isolated and alive. Most of them did not have any part in the horror regime of Hitler. After WWII there was a terrible refugee situation on top of a smashed infrastructure in most of Europe. Have we forgot? In 1992 the civil war broke out in Yugoslavia, most severe in Bosnia. To Denmark came 17,000 refugees in few months. Close to where we lived, 4 centers were opened. We decided that we could not be friends with all of them, but we would try to find one family. We went to an open door arrangement and got some contacts, that ended up with the Lutfiu-family — Kosovo-Albanians — fleeing Serbian oppression. We are just a family to family friendship — visiting one another, helping out as friends do, participating in joys and sorrows. We are still very close friends after 23 years — and this year they invited us to Kosovo — to see their homeland. We did that in August! Now we know them a little bit better! Again Europe is flooded with refugees! I think we all are going to do our best! — so that all who are threatened on their life, can have a future here, but we can’t have all the poor people coming from all over the world, because they are poor! And how is it? Did the Thracians come once from Asia? Didn’t the Scandinavians come with the other German tribes from Asia — once back in history?”




    John Cooper, PA, USA


    “I have very strong mixed feelings about the refugee crisis/ migration into Europe and the USA. In todays world we tend to be told we absolutely have to be Politically Correct and not hurt others’ feelings. Im told that I must accept people, issues and norms that Im uncomfortable with. This is wrong and infringes on my rights.


    A little background would help you understand. I was born and raised in a family where my father was in the military for 30 years. I was born in England as my father married an English citizen, my mother. My dad was stationed in France in the 1950s. I attended Kindergarten in France in 1957, and went through grades 3-6 in Germany, when my dad was stationed in Wurzburg. I was taught German at the American Elementary School in Wurzburg, as a mandatory subject.


    I went into the military in 1971 and had three assignments to Germany. In late 1976 I was stationed in Wiesbaden, and 1979-1982 in Nuremberg, with my last tour being in 1983-1985 at Neu Ulm, the (former) Federal Republic of Germany. Unfortunately the Cold War was still going on, the two Germanies were separate and the Iron Curtain was still up.


    Unlike many of my fellow American GIs I felt comfortable travelling, shopping, and living in Germany, and Europe. When I was allowed I always lived off the base I was assigned to. I found the people in Europe to be some of the finest human beings I ever met, and I made many friends because I tried to use the language, and I got involved in activities and customs of the host country I was stationed in.


    I saw in Germany first hand how the Turkish Arbeitwerkers and some other immigrants did not assimilate into German society as it was said they were expected to. They basically stayed in their own communities, learned very little German and continued to practice their form of Islam.

    I practice my own religion but it does not control all my thoughts or actions everyday. It seems that Islam does not allow some freedoms we take for granted in the ‘Free World!’ Nor does it allow for you to accept different belief systems as I have been taught to do. If someone burns or desecrates a Bible in front of me I would not harm them or call for their death. Sure I would be mad but thats as far as it would go.


    The refugees coming into Europe need to assimilate into European Society fully which means accepting the norms, culture, lifestyles and customs of where they live and strive to integrate into the host country which is paramount towards success. This will not happen with Islamic refugees. It also seems to me like people who are so much in fear of their life sure seem to be choosy on where they want to live instead of being happy in any country they are safe in.


    Normally this process happens starting with the second and third generation of children from the original parents who immigrated. Europe and any country who allows these people into their countries are setting themselves up for untold problems in the future.


    I would like to finish by saying I enjoy listening to RRI and its fantastic English language programming. Listening makes me want to travel to Romania and sample the places I have learned about. Thank you for your programs.”




    Ferhat Bezazel, Skikda, Algeria


    “I think the refugee crisis, that Europe is facing, is not a new or a modern phenomenon, because immigration from Africa to Europe, via Italy and Spain, is an old phenomenon. However, I think, first of all, of the complexity of the problem and the numerous questions it raises. In my opinion, the most important one is why such people decided to leave their homeland to go to live in a foreign country. The reasons are many and complicated, with insecurity and poverty being among the main reasons. I would like to share with you my own story with the boats of death. In October 2007, I decided to go illegally in a small boat of only ten meters, together with some friends of mine, in an effort to reach the Italian coast. At that time, I foolishly decided to face the waves of the Mediterranean Sea, because all doors of hope seemed closed to my eyes. I am young, I have no work, nor money to live with, and the future is black in my country, Algeria. Furthermore, I live in a small village where terrorist attacks were taking place on a daily basis and people died every week. So, I was living in an atmosphere of fear and poverty. That’s why I took the risk to go to Europe, in search of work. At that time, my own safety and security were not an important question for me. I never thought I might die at sea, as my only dream was to reach the Italian coasts by all means. The journey was like hell: we spent more than 15 hours without food or water at high sea. In the end, we were rescued by an Algerian commercial ship. It was like a nightmare, but I wanted so much to go to Italy, as a refugee. Now I live in Algeria, but nothing has changed. I live in poverty and it is hard to lead a decent life. Right now, I am 35 years old, but I can’t get married and I can’t have a house. I think the refugee crisis in Europe will never end, because theres no democracy, nor chances of leading a decent life in the most countries in Africa or the Middle East. In an effort to find a possible solution, maybe Europe should help the African countries create a stable economy and equal chances to work in the poor countries of the region. In the end, I would like to say that refugees are humans, too, and the European countries should treat them as humans in need.”




    David Clarke, St Helen Island


    ”It brings tears to our eyes when watching the TV and see the plight of the refuges, poor souls, especially the little children and infants. It is hard to believe that this is really happening in the outside world. It is quite apparent that this is a tremendous strain on the resources of the countries involved. We live on this island of 47 square miles, in the middle of nowhere, as they say, where there is peace and tranquillity. If this happened here, we would have insurmountable problems because we are grant-aided by Britain (…), although the island is steeped in history. Weeks ago, on October 15th 2015, the island celebrated the 200th anniversary of the arrival of Napoleon”.




    Mitul Kansal, Haryana, India


    ”The Syrian conflict has devastated the nation, more than 24,000 people have been killed, including 12,000 children. One million others have been wounded or left disabled. Nearly 12 million Syrians, half of them children, have been forced by fighters to leave their homes. At least 7.6 million have been displaced within Syria. And more than 4 million have fled as refugees in neighbouring countries. Children affected by the Syrian conflict are at risk of becoming ill, malnourished, abused or exploited. Millions have been forced to quit schools. Refugees are fleeing to the neighbouring countries of Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and further away, to Germany, Serbia, Hungary, Turkey etc. (…) The refugees need food, clothing, health assistance, shelter, basic household and hygiene items. They need a reliable supply of clean water as well as sanitation facilities. As the winter is coming, they also need warm clothing, heaters etc. Children need a safe protective environment and a chance to go to school. Adults need employment options in case of long-term displacement.(…)It’s difficult for parents to afford books, uniforms, tuition fees for their children. In response to the wave of migration towards Europe, I think, today there is a great need of selfless persons who can provide a helping hand to them and create an atmosphere of hope for refugees. We may have different religions, we may have different languages, we may have different skin color and we may belong to different regions, but one thing is definite and true, we are all belonging to the same human race.”




    Khalil Abdel Kader, Algeria


    “The refugee crisis now facing Europe is not new, it started several decades ago, when young people from African and Middle Eastern countries left for Western Europe in search of a better life. But the conflicts in these regions, especially the war in Syria, have boosted the migration phenomenon, turning it from individual migration, as it was several decades ago, into collective migration, through which people are trying to escape the consequences of war, poverty and death. However, I believe that the fact that some refugees were happy to be well received in some European countries led to an increase in the migration flows to these countries, the refugees preferring these states to the neighbouring Arab states where the living standard is lower than in Europe. I think that choosing the west and the north of Europe is not beneficial for most refugees, because Europe is itself facing an economic crisis. Furthermore, the western way of living, which is totally different from that in their countries of origin, makes their social integration very difficult. It is true that, for humanitarian reasons, it is necessary to accept the challenges emerged against the backdrop of the refugee crisis, but we also have to think of the future. Maybe the European Union should negotiate solutions for the refugees with some countries outside Europe, especially with the Arab states that have a better economic situation, like Algeria and the Gulf countries, in the sense of hosting certain quotas of refugees. Although I am convinced that, irrespective of the country they come from, the refugees want to settle in Europe. I wish wars would end and the situation in the refugees’ home countries would improve, so that the phenomenon of collective migration should subside and people should be able to have a better life in their own countries.”



    Simon Rudd, Manchester, UK


    “I have a special feeling for migrants as I’ve never really felt at home in my resident country. If one is to be prepared to travel so as to improve one’s life and to be prepared to contribute to another culture and people, then one should be given the opportunity. As for mine own countrys policy of limited immigration, the UK has limited resources especially within our policy of cutbacks and efforts towards economic surplus”.




    Shahzad Shabbir, Chichawatni, Pakistan


    “The Syrian civil war has created more than four million refugees. What’s holding back sympathy for the Syrians? They’ve been barrel-bombed in Aleppo by their own regime, they’ve been tortured, kidnapped and massacred by miscellaneous Jihadists and opposition militias. They’ve been in refugee camps for years, waiting for (…) the international community to come to their aid. Now, when they take to the roads, to the boats and to the trains, all our political leaders can think of is…. fences, barbed wire and more police. But this is the real challenge: is German society ready and willing for such a fundamental upheaval, one that will touch on all aspects of peoples lives? It is important to know that the experiment cannot be terminated, even if it fails. That means, decisions are being made today that will have repercussions for generations. And even those who do not regulate what is happening, like the Germans at the moment, are still taking decisions nonetheless. It is time to take control again.”




    Madhav Garg, Ambala City, India


    “I am a new listener to RRI’s programs and I am very happy to learn that RRI is hosting a forum for its listeners on the subject of the ‘refugee crisis.’ Due to the Syrian conflict, millions of Syrian people have been forced to leave Syria, where thousands of children have been killed. Thousands fled the country and headed for Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Serbia, Hungry, Germany or Iraq, for example. They are living in camps and those who don’t pay high rents for accommodation and others. They have no income sources. The future of their children is very dark. They cannot go to school. So jobs should be created for them, and they should be provided with basic need facilities. We are human beings, and it is our moral duty to provide a helping hand, to heal their wounds”.

  • LISTENERS’ DAY 2015 on RRI

    LISTENERS’ DAY 2015 on RRI


    Dear friends, on Sunday, November 1st 2015, RRI celebrates Listeners’ Day. As usual, we invite you to be an active part of our special program airing on that day. The topic of this year’s edition is refugees. We have all followed the news about the refugee crisis, and have seen that hundreds of thousands of people risk their lives leaving their native countries in search of a better life in Europe. This wave of refugees has become a big challenge for Europe, for European values, the labor market, economic growth, and the process of integration into society. However, no one can ignore that each refugee has his or her own personal story, which sometimes is very sad.



    Therefore Listeners’ Day on RRI invites you to share your opinion on the refugee issue, and to tell us stories you know about refugees. We are sure that many of you know such stories, since the refugee crisis affects the whole world.



    We are looking forward to receiving your pre-recorded or written contributions, which you can send by e-mail or by Facebook and any of the other social networks on which RRI has a profile. Our address is RRI, 60-64 General Berthelot street, sector 1 Bucharest, PO BOX 111, postal code 010165, e-mail: engl@rri.ro.

  • LISTENERS’ DAY 2015 on RRI

    LISTENERS’ DAY 2015 on RRI


    Dear friends, on Sunday, November 1st 2015, RRI celebrates Listeners’ Day. As usual, we invite you to be an active part of our special program airing on that day. The topic of this year’s edition is refugees. We have all followed the news about the refugee crisis, and have seen that hundreds of thousands of people risk their lives leaving their native countries in search of a better life in Europe. This wave has become a big challenge for Europe, for European values, the labor market, economic growth, and the process of integration into society. However, no one can ignore that each refugee has his or her own personal story, which sometimes is very sad.



    Therefore Listeners’ Day on RRI invites you to share your opinion on the refugee issue, and to tell us stories you know about refugees. We are sure that many of you know such stories, since the refugee crisis affects the whole world.



    We are looking forward to receiving your pre-recorded or written contributions, which you can send by e-mail or by Facebook and of the other social networks on which RRI has a profile. Our address is RRI, 60-64 General Berthelot street, sector 1 Bucharest, PO BOX 111, postal code 010165, e-mail: engl@rri.ro.

  • LISTENERS’ DAY 2015 on RRI

    LISTENERS’ DAY 2015 on RRI


    Dear friends, on Sunday, November 1st 2015, RRI celebrates Listeners’ Day. As usual, we invite you to be an active part of our special program airing on that day. The topic of this year’s edition is refugees. We have all followed the news about the refugee crisis, and have seen that hundreds of thousands of people risk their lives leaving their native countries in search of a better life in Europe. This wave of refugees has become a big challenge for Europe, for European values, the labor market, economic growth, and the process of integration into society. However, no one can ignore that each refugee has his or her own personal story, which sometimes is very sad.



    Therefore Listeners’ Day on RRI invites you to share your opinion on the refugee issue, and to tell us stories you know about refugees. We are sure that many of you know such stories, since the refugee crisis affects the whole world.



    We are looking forward to receiving your pre-recorded or written contributions, which you can send by e-mail or by Facebook and any of the other social networks on which RRI has a profile. Our address is RRI, 60-64 General Berthelot street, sector 1 Bucharest, PO BOX 111, postal code 010165, e-mail: engl@rri.ro.

  • October 6, 2015

    October 6, 2015

    An agreement between Romania and the US was signed Monday in Washington meant to boost cooperation in preventing and fighting serious crimes. The agreement was signed at the meeting of the Romanian interior minister and deputy prime minister, Gabriel Oprea, with the American Attorney General Loretta Lynch. By concluding this agreement Romania complies with another technical criterion necessary for fulfilling the conditions of the Visa Waiver Program as part of the process of visa waiver for the Romanian citizens who travel to the US, minister Gabriel Oprea said. The document regulates, on a legal basis, cooperation, prevention, identification and investigation of serious crimes and of terrorist crimes and ensures the exchange of information between the relevant authorities of the two countries.



    The Romanian foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu is participating today in Seville, Spain, in the “2015 Multinational Ballistic Missile Defense” conference organized by the US Missile Defense Agency. According to the Romanian Foreign Ministry, Bogdan Aurescu will highlight the strategic significance of the Romanian- American bilateral project in the field of defense. The Romanian official will meet with Vice Admiral James D. Syring as well as with other American high-ranking officials. The talks will focus on aspects related to the location of elements of the American missile defense shield in Romania, at the Deveselu base, that will become operational by the end of this year. The Romanian Foreign Ministry recalls that the previous edition of the conference took place in Bucharest and represented the recognition of Romania’s substantial contribution in the missile defense field.



    The Russian army announced it bombarded on Monday several targets of the extremist movement the Islamic State, especially in the Damascus province, on the 6th day of its military intervention in Syria. These are the first strikes in the Syrian capital area. The Russian planes last week started their first strikes in Syria. Moscow says that these strikes target only Islamic State locations but Ankara and its western allies accuse Russia of focusing their attacks on the Syrian moderate forces, France press reports. The US and its allies denounce the fact that the Russian air strikes against the Syrian militants are “indiscriminate”, also targeting the opponents of the president Bashar al Assad who is supported by Moscow.



    Romania’s national rugby team is meeting today in Leicester the Canadian team in the 3rd match of the World Cup Group D hosted by England and Wales. The Romanians lost the first 2 matches to France and Ireland. In turn Canada lost the first 3 matches at this edition of the World Cup to Ireland, Italy and France. Romania and Canada have so far met 5 times. The Canadians won the first matches while the Romanians the last three. In Group D the Romanian team will also play against Italy on Sunday.



    The Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded this year to Japanese Takaaki Kajita and Canadian Arthur B. McDonald for their key contributions to the experiments which demonstrated that neutrinos change identities. This metamorphosis requires that neutrinos have mass. On Monday researchers William C. Campbell (Ireland), Satoshi Omura (Japan) and Youyou Tu (China) were awarded the Nobel Prize in physiology and medicine for their discoveries concerning a novel therapy against infections caused by roundworms parasites and also for the discoveries concerning a novel therapy against Malaria. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry will be announced Wednesday, the Prize in Literature on Thursday while the Peace Prize and the Prize in Economy will be announced on Friday and Monday respectively.



    And now we have a special announcement. On November 1st RRI will mark Listeners’ Day. As usual we invite you to participate actively in our special program to be aired on that day. The topic of this year’s edition is devoted to refugees. We have all followed the news about the refugee crisis and have seen that hundreds of thousands of people risks their lives to leave their native countries in search of a better life in Europe. Their number has become a challenge for Europe, for the European values, the labor market, economic growth and integration into society. However no one can ignore that each refugee has his or her own personal story, which sometimes is very sad. Therefore Listeners’ Day on RRI invites you to share your opinion on the refugee issue and tell us the stories you know about refugees. We are looking forward to receiving your recorded or written answers, which you can send by e-mail or by means of Facebook and of the other social networks of RRI. Our address is RRI, 60-64 General Berthelot street, sector 1 Bucharest, PO BOX 111, postal code 010165, e-mail: engl@rri.ro.