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Les Archives de Radio-Canada

Home · Arts & Entertainment · Media · Our Voice to the World: 60 Years of RCI

Topic spans: 1945 - 1996

Our Voice to the World: 60 Years of RCI

In February 1945, the "Voice of Canada" spoke to the world for the first time. The CBC International Service was founded to broadcast to Canadian Forces overseas in the Second World War. At war's end the radio service focused on telling the world about Canada in over a dozen languages. Despite budget cuts and critics who accused it of employing communists or operating as a government mouthpiece, the service now called Radio Canada International has persevered. CBC Archives looks back on RCI's six decades on shortwave.

Photo courtesy of National Archives of Canada.

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8 television clips
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13 radio clips

Broadcasting to the world

Broadcast Date: Feb. 25, 1945

The Second World War is winding down in Europe, but Canada's new international shortwave radio service is just getting started. From its studios in Montreal and a web of shortwave transmission towers in Sackville, N.B., the service targets both Canadian and foreign listeners. In this inaugural broadcast, Prime Minister Mackenzie King says the International Service of the CBC will extend Canadian ideals of equality and freedom to the world.

King is joined by Justice Minister Louis St-Laurent, who addresses the audience in French, and by Howard B. Chase, chairman of the CBC board of governors. The three talk about the service's goal of reflecting Canada beyond its borders. The International Service will broadcast to the United Kingdom and western Europe in three languages — English, French and German — with a signal that is strong and clear.

Broadcasting to the world

• International broadcasting from Canada was proposed as early as the 1930s, and studies by the CBC's board of governors concluded that Canada should be sending its point of view abroad by radio.
• As the Second World War continued in Europe, it also became apparent that Canadians serving overseas needed a source of news from home.
• The CBC International Service was created by an order-in-council of the federal cabinet in September 1942.

• The CBC was responsible for setting up and maintaining the new service, but funding came from direct parliamentary grants.
• The final authority for the service rested with the Department of External Affairs. Unlike the rest of the CBC, broadcast material was subject to review by the department's "policy editor."
• According to a departmental memo written a month before the launch, External Affairs regarded the International Service as "virtually a new Wartime Information Office abroad."

• It should have taken about six months to make the shortwave station operational. Due to delays in obtaining the necessary equipment and construction, almost 29 months passed before the official launch.
• Engineers chose to erect the service's transmitters on a salt marsh called the Tantramar marshlands just outside Sackville, N.B. The site's proximity to the east coast, its low elevation and the conductive powers of its soil made it an ideal location for shortwave broadcasting.

• Right from the beginning, the new service was dubbed "The Voice of Canada." Watch a Canadian Army Newsreel describing the construction in Sackville.
• Montreal was chosen as the site for the studios and headquarters of the International Service because both English- and French-speaking staff members were on hand to host and produce programs.
• The service's first offices were in a former garment factory that had more recently been used as a brothel.

• Though Feb. 25, 1945, was the official launch date, the International Service had been carrying out test transmissions since December 1944.
• On Christmas Day 1944, the service broadcast a Christmas special for Canadian servicemen in English and French.
• This clip says the service began broadcasting in three languages (English, French and German). However, it also began testing Czech-language broadcasts in February and Czech was on the schedule beginning in March 1945.

• Psychological warfare against Germany was a priority before the war ended. German-language news shed a new light on Nazi leaders and told Germans what was happening in their own country.
• German prisoners of war, held in Canadian prison camps, were encouraged to record messages that would be heard at home. The messages were used as "listener bait" to encourage German audiences to tune in.

Broadcasting to the world

Medium: Radio

Program: CBC Radio Special

Broadcast Date: Feb. 25, 1945

Guest(s): Howard B. Chase, William Lyon Mackenzie King, Louis St-Laurent

Duration: 10:57

Last updated:
Dec. 3, 2010


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