The Hope audio library is celebrating its 60th anniversary with a service on June 22nd, at 10:30 a.m., on the Adventist television station Hope TV and in the Hope TV media library on hopetv.de.
For six decades, employees of the Hope audio library have been committed to providing blind and visually impaired people with access to Christian literature. The success story of the audio library for the blind began in the 1950s, when pastors of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Germany realized that blind and visually impaired church members lacked access to Christian literature. They initiated a project in which texts were recorded on tape reels and sent out, which quickly found favor beyond the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
The range of the audio library for the blind and visually impaired soon expanded.
Pastoral counseling sessions were held over the phone and, from 1981 onwards, “preparation sessions” have been held at Friedensau Theological University to prepare blind and visually impaired participants for everyday life. Sighted people learn how they can help blind and visually impaired people.
From 1988 onwards, the audio library for the blind in Darmstadt has been offering regular leisure activities at various locations. There are also regional meetings of listeners and guests, which allows the team to build up a very personal relationship with many listeners.
The sound carriers used have changed over time: tape reels have been replaced by cassettes, and CDs in DAISY format, SD cards or USB sticks make it possible to listen to extensive books and magazines via various media. Times change but the aim of the Hope audio library remains the same: to accompany blind and visually impaired people in their relationship with God, to strengthen their faith and to convey the hope of the gospel.
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