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Interview Portuguese Spanish    
Year 8 - N° 404 - March 8, 2015
MARTHA RIOS GUIMARÃES
marthinharg@uol.com.br
São Paulo, SP (Brasil)
 
Translation
Leonardo Rocha - l.rocha1989@gmail.com

 
Suzete M. Andreotti Amorim: 

“Thousands of people hear our programme every Sunday and we make a difference in the lives of so many”

The coordinator of the radio programme Momento Espírita (Spiritist Moment), which is celebrating this week its 43rd birthday, tells us about the early days of the show and its main goals
 

Our guest this week is Suzete M. Andreotti Amorim (photo), the coordinator of the Momento Espírita radio programme alongside her husband, Antonio Carlos Amorim. Momento Espírita is one of the longest-running Spiritist programmes in Brazilian radio. It was broadcast for the first time on March 5th 1972 on the Boa Nova Radio Network in the B

razilian state of São Paulo. It goes on air every Sunday, from 12:00 to 12:50, aimed at disseminating Spiritism. Some 30 people take part in the programme, led by Suzete M. A. Amorim, who gave us this interview: 

Suzete, tell us a bit about the early days of the programme. 

Zulmiro Santos Silva and two other Spiritists in the city of Jabaquara prepared the first edition, which was broadcast on March 5th 1972. They were given 25 minutes’ airtime every Sunday, from 06:30 in the morning. Zulmiro used to go round with his then state-of-the-art tape recorder, doing interviews that he broadcast on the programme. They also read out messages and extracts from Spiritist books. 

How did you and your husband get involved in the programme? 

Zulmiro got ill in August 1975. The programme had been extended to 50 minutes. He could not carry on and a friend of ours, André Luiz Bertan, from the local Spiritist Youth, invited us to take over the programme. We did not need to think twice. We were young and enthusiastic. Four months another friend from the Spiritist Youth, Mauro Spínola, joined the group. We were then six young people. And 40 years on, here we are! 

Forty years ago, you certainly did not have the material resources you have today. And Brazil was under a military dictatorship. How did you deal with the censorship and constraints on freedom of speech at the time? 

The work was very hard indeed; the censorship was fierce. We had to type all the scripts, amounting usually to nine pages. We used very thin yellow paper and made a carbon copy. The censors did not accept any corrections. The script was handed over to the censors, which returned it 15 days later. Only then we were allowed to record the programme. We could not change a single letter. The radio had to keep a tape available for the censors in case they wanted to check what went on air against the script. We used to meet every Friday in a small unit my parents had in the Lapa neighbourhood of São Paulo. It was only a kitchen and room. We began our work at 8pm on Friday night and finished around 10am on Saturday. We then recorded the programme and took the tape to the radio, which broadcast it on Sunday at 12:00. That was our routine for many years.  

How has the relationship with your audience over these 43 years? 

The first major change was when the radio station doubled the power of its generators, from 5,000 to 10,000 watts. We celebrated a lot, as our reach and audience increased significantly. Later, democracy was restored in Brazil, which meant we were then able to do the programme live. The introduction of satellite dishes took our programme to distant Brazilian states. We began to get letters and phone calls with questions from other parts of the country. Now we have the Internet, which enables to reach the rest of the world, and Facebook, which gives us amazing feedback and the possibility of closer cooperation with our listeners. 

How much has the team working in the programme changed? 

Our team has been changing constantly along the years. Amorim, Mauro and I are the only ones to remain in the team from the beginning. We have two permanent slots in the programme. One is called Espiritismo Hoje, Spiritism Today, and deals with day-to-day matters in the light of Spiritism. The other slot is called Estude e Viva, Study and Live, and looks into the core works of Allan Kardec and other classics of Spiritism. We also give our audience the latest news from the Spirtist Movement and talk about issues suggested by our listeners and people who access the programmed through the Internet. 

Could you leave a final message to our readers? 

Along the past 43 years, the Momento Espírita programme has taken the Spiritist message to so many people. Many of them have come back later and have told us that they changed their lives after hearing one our programmes. That is only possible because we work hard and are very rigorous. Also, we have a fantastic team, which spends their Sundays working on the task of sending a positive message to people they do not even know. But I have no doubts of their joy and pleasure in doing this job, which helps so much to disseminate the Spiritist Teachings. May they carry on unshaken in their determination! 


To listen to the programme, check www.radioboanova.com.br. The Facebook link is:
https://www.facebook.com/ProgramaMomentoEspirita?fref=ts 



 


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