FROM
THE ARCHIVES - A BRIEF HISTORY OF RADIO IN THE COUNTRY
Throughout the history of the country, radio
has been the conveyor of important information at critical moments. Virtually
the whole population was glued to radio sets at events such as the news of the
United Nations vote on the partition of Palestine in 1947. In times of national
emergency radio was, and still is, used to call up troops. In the pre-state period, all
sides in the conflict used radio to disseminate information, deliberate
mis-information and propaganda. The Jews effectively used clandestine radio, and
today though pirate radio is against the law some people still retain a
sentimental feeling towards a medium that was so important in the formation of
the nation.
With radio so prominent in the collective
memory it has a special place in people's affections as so often it was
used in order to follow important events affecting their lives, and still when the hourly news
comes on the radio people stop whatever they are doing whether in shops, on buses
(all fitted with radios) or in the street. Before TV and a multiplicity of
radio stations came along, at night in any town or city street the voice of the
Kol Israel radio news announcer could be heard emanating from every window
around.
It was in about 1930 that radio antennas
could first be seen on homes in Palestine and sets went on sale in city
stores. At first the only stations to be heard were distant ones, by short-wave
from Europe such as Radio Paris and BBC Empire Service, and medium wave from
Cairo. Then in 1932 with 675 licensed sets local radio came to the country and
here is a brief chronology of its radio history.
1932 April 7. At the Levant Fair in Tel Aviv
the very first radio station goes on-air operated by Mendel Abramovitch under a
special license from the British Mandatory Government. It went on air with a
speech by Abramovitch and remarks from Tel Aviv Mayor Meir Dizengoff including
an expression of hope that the station would be expanded to reach a worldwide
Jewish audience. The station that came to be known as 'Radio Tel Aviv'
broadcasts for several periods and finally closes in April 1935.
1936 March 30. The Palestine Broadcasting
Service (PBS) is inaugurated
by British Mandatory Authority from Ramallah with studios and one transmitter
on 668 kc/s (kHz) 449 meters with a power of 20 kW. Staff are recruited for
daily broadcasts in English, Arabic and Hebrew and training given by the BBC.
The station is born at a time of great tension between Arabs and Jews that
within weeks erupts into violence. The Hebrew name of the station is eventually
agreed to be 'Kol Yerushalyim' (The Voice of Jerusalem) after argument rages
with Arab leaders when the Jews originally want to call it 'Kol Eretz Israel'
(The Voice of the Land of Israel).
1938 Publication of new magazine Radio
News in Hebrew and English to regularly list the various programs
receivable in Palestine. Senior PBS employee tells Radio News that he
would like to start a television service in Palestine.
The first clandestine radio station opens which is operated by an underground Jewish group. Each of the main groups eventually operate stations but most activity is after the Second World War. A history of Jewish underground radio stations by broadcasting historian Professor Douglas Boyd.
1939 July. Opening of New Broadcasting Building in
Jerusalem for the Palestine Broadcasting Service at Queen Melisande's Street
(now known as Queen Helene Street) and this is still the home of Kol Israel.
1939 August 2. The Etzel Jewish Underground
sabotages the PBS in Jerusalem and two staff members are killed but
broadcasting quickly resumes temporarily from the original studio in Ramallah.
1940 March 13. The Haganah Jewish
Underground opens its clandestine radio station that is called Kol Israel (the
Voice of Israel) on 42 meters (about 7000 kHz). Within a short time the Haganah
decides to reserve this title for the when a state is established and the
station is renamed. It ceases in June when there is a danger of invasion by
Axis forces in the Eastern Mediterranean. Poster advertizing start
of Kol Israel.
1942 The PBS opens a second channel (PBS2)
on 574 kHz (522 meters at 20 kW) and the first channel PBS 1 is moved slightly
to 677 kHz (443 meters) which allows it to be heard better in Europe as no
other station is on the wavelength.
1943 The British Army opens the first
Palestine station of the Middle East section of the Forces Broadcasting Service
(FBS) with call sign JCPA on 316 meters. The studios are on Mount Zion at the
Hospice of St. Pierre en Gallicantu and the transmitter is at Beit Jala. The
station later moves to 216 meters (1391 kHz) and a second station JCKW opens on
shortwave 41.55 meters (7220 kHz) with additional programs for troops from
India.
Further FBS transmitters open later in the
war at Haifa, Sarafan base at Ramla (near Tel Aviv), and at RAF Gaza and RAF
Qastina. 1946 British Forces station schedule
Also based in Jerusalem is Sharq al Adna an Arabic
language station. This station ceases transmission at the end of the British Mandate
and moves to Cyprus from where it operates until the Suez Crisis of 1956 when
it is closed down by the British authorities and the transmitters are taken
over by the BBC as the East Mediterranean Relay Station which still operates
today.
1945 October 4. The Hagana clandestine
station (Kol Ha-Hagana) resumes transmission as conflict between Jews and the
British intensifies in post-war Palestine. Radio takes on a crucial role as
many more Jewish underground stations start to broadcast on shortwave.
1946 February 18. The British Army traces the Lehi group's secret station and arrests the operators including announcer Ge'ula Cohen who later has a long career as a politician. PBS program schedule of 1946.
A variety of radio sets are on the market
including models manufactured in Palestine.
1947 The PBS prepares to close down as the
date for British withdrawal nears. A statement by a PBS employee
in late 1947.
1948 May 14. Israeli independence is proclaimed and Kol Israel (The Voice of Israel) starts broadcasting using the staff and facilities of both the PBS and the former clandestine Hagana stations. Kol Israel becomes a government department first under the Ministry of the Interior, the Office of Posts and Telegraphs and subsequently under the Prime Minister's Office. Publication of November 1948 showing both former PBS and Hagana transmitting stations in use.
In the war between Israel and the Arab
armies, Ramallah, where the PBS transmitting station is located, becomes part
of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. It broadcasts the Jordanian radio service
on 677 kHz until the Six Day War in June 1967.
1949 Kol Israel service quickly develops as
shown by publication of October 1949. Israel is one of the first countries to pioneer the
use of FM (VHF) transmission; at first simply to distribute audio from studios
to medium wave stations.
October 30. BBC in London starts daily
shortwave broadcasts to Israel. The Hebrew Service supplies a great deal of
talent to Israeli broadcasting until it closes on October 27, 1968. Inaugural program. Final Program.
1950 March 11. Broadcasts specifically
targeted at overseas audiences are started as "Kol Zion La Golah"
(The Voice of Zion to the Diaspora") and are operated from Kol Israel
facilities by the World Zionist Organisation (in collaboration with the Jewish
Agency). Kol Zion is integrated into Kol Israel in 1958 and the title dropped. Kol Israel schedule from November 1950.
September 24. An Israel Defense Forces (IDF)
station opens named Galei Zahal and is the first
competition for Kol Israel. Program for soldiers previously aired on Kol Israel
are transferred to the new station.
1951 The overall organization operating Kol
Israel becomes known as The Israel Broadcasting Service.
1952 A second channel starts on 652 kHz and
is named Reshet Bet (Second Network) and the other transmitters are called
Reshet Alef (First Network). A program schedule from the time. The overseas short-wave channel comes to be referred to in-house as
Reshet Gimel.
1953 First high power shortwave transmitter
of 50 kilowatts is purchased from RCA for Kol Zion Lagolah and enters service
in 1955 - 1953 schedule.
1957 Programs are started for the United Nations Emergency Force in Sinai daily from 1600-1700 in Swedish, French, and English on Channel B (Reshet Bet). 1957 Publication
April 27. Israel's most popular radio
program of all time 'Three
Men in a Boat' achieves its highest audience.
1958 Arabic network starts operation known
as 'Sout el Israyl', Channel D (Reshet Dalet) on 737 kHz with 100 kW of power.
1963 March 2. Knesset votes to allow the
start of Educational Television and on August 8 agreement is reached with CBS
in the USA for them to assist in the building of general Israel TV.
1965 June 6. The Broadcasting Authority Law
is passed by Israel's Parliament (The
Knesset) which creates the Israel Broadcasting Authority (IBA) as an
independent public body. In 1968 the law is amended to include television
transmission. Overseas broadcasts of Kol Israel are secured under a legal
provision that there must be programming beamed abroad to Jews and others.
1967 June. During the Six Day War the
Ramallah radio station that was originally the PBS is captured by Israel and
henceforth transmits IBA Arabic network Reshet Dalet on 677 kHz (674 kHz from
1975, and 675 kHz from November 1978) using the 1942 20 kW Marconi transmitter
that is still operational. The original1936 transmitter had been removed and
scrapped by the Jordanians prior to 1967 and a new 100 kW Telefunken
transmitter donated by the Federal German Republic was in the process of being
installed when the war started.
1968 May 2. Israel Television is inaugurated
by the IBA on Independence Day with the televising of a parade through the
streets of Jerusalem. Radio now has a rival medium. In fact TV sets went on the
market in around 1960 when signals from Cyprus, Lebanon and Egypt could be
picked up. Israel Education TV was technically the first station in the country
as it started transmissions on March 24, 1966, and its transmission was later
incorporated into the daytime schedules of Israel Television. Much argument
rages over whether there should be TV on Friday evening (the Eve of the
Sabbath) and the IBA defies the wishes of the Government and broadcasts after
an intervention by the High Court.
1969 The shortwave facilities of Kol Israel
are greatly upgraded by the purchase of four 300 kilowatt transmitters and
several antennas directed at different parts of the world.
1972 July 26. Israel is connected to the
world by satellite for TV and radio broadcasts by the opening of the Emek
Ha'ela Telecommunications station.
1973 May 18. Offshore pirate radio station
the Voice of Peace is opened by peace campaigner Abie Nathan and achieves enormous
popularity.
With the growth of television the IBA wishes
to stress the cohesiveness of the organization and the name Kol Israel is
dropped in favor of Shidurei Yisrael (Israel Broadcasting).
1976 June. New pop music network Reshet
Gimel (Third Network) starts operation on medium wave 531 kHz and FM stations
are added some years later. In common with Reshet Bet it carries advertizing.
The overseas channel, which had been the 'third network', is henceforth
referred to in-house as Reshet Hei (the fifth network).
1979 May. The title Kol Israel is
re-introduced for the IBA radio services.
1981 January 13, Israel TV officially starts
transmission in color. Some imported programs had previously been in color and
the public bought sets but the Government believed this consumer spending gave
unwanted stimulation to the sensitive economy and ordered the IBA to suppress the
color signal. Enterprising individuals then developed a device to recover the
suppressed color signal and the Government, fearing great unpopularity,
eventually gave in but heavily taxed the sets.
1983 The FM transmitter network formerly of
Reshet Alef is used to form a new stereo classical music and cultural network
known as Kol Ha Musica (the Voice of Music).
1985 September 29. Bill to create the Second
TV channel gets preliminary approval in the Knesset and an Act is passed on
January 1, 1990 with the service starting on November 11, 1993.
1986 July 29. Cable TV Act is passed after
illegal operators had been active for some years. At a ceremony on February 2,
1990 some residents of Rishon Lezion are the first to receive TV (and radio)
programming via cable.
1987
April 10. Agreement is reached for Voice of America to build a powerful
shortwave station in the Arava valley. However there are environmental and
other problems and the station is never built.
October 7. IBA journalists and producers go
on strike and TV and radio closes for two months.
1993 October 1. Voice of Peace station
closes down - Abie Nathan says 'The Goal has been achieved'.
1994 May. Under the agreement giving
autonomy to the Palestinians they are able to operate broadcasting stations.
The initial areas are Gaza and Jericho but as it is not feasible to build a high power station capable of reaching the entire area they are permitted to
operate from the Ramallah site ahead of its handover. The Palestinian
Broadcasting Corporation (PBC) operating as Voice of Palestine is inaugurated
from the station and in December 1995 Ramallah comes fully within the
jurisdiction of the Palestinian Authority. The Israel Ministry of
Communications initially moves the transmitter's frequency to 702 kHz - which
is also being used by 'Al Kuds' a station beaming to Palestinians from Syria.
The two stations interfere with each other very badly and after a short time
PBC is given permission to move back to 675 kHz.
1995 September. Commercial local radio begins under the regulatory control of the Second Channel and Local Radio Authority.
1996 May 18. Israel's Amos 1 satellite is
launched and transmits domestic TV and radio.
All documents are original, translations, or
re-set from poor quality copies.
Enquiries to historian