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Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski (left) with CCM Media President Krzysztof Budzisz on June 17 after he received the Cross of Merits for development of free media in Poland. |
On Monday, June 17, Krzysztof Budzisz, head of the Poland-based CCM Media, was invited to the presidential palace in Warsaw to receive a prestigious award for "helping establish free media and free speech in Poland."
As part of the celebrations marking the 20-year anniversary of the Poland National Radio and Television Board, Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski presented Budzisz with the Cross of Merits. He was the only recipient to represent local media. Others capturing awards included leaders of the country's National Radio Network and the presidents of two leading commercial networks.
"How happy we are about this honor," said Krol, president and chief executive officer of DEOrecordings which has operated CCM since 1986, using music and media to spread the gospel.
"The thing the government likes about CCM is that we're helping fulfill the social and local needs of communities," explained Krol. "We deliver what we promise-playing an active role in local communities; influencing people with an honest and honorable attitude, and adding a pluralistic voice to the media."
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Henryk Krol |
Krol added that part of CCM's strategy is to connect "secular" radio programs with Internet follow-up, accomplished via the SzukajacBoga.pl (Jesus.net) movement. "Thousands of people are individually connected to our army of volunteer 'e-coaches' and small-group leaders," Krol related.
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Historic radio tower in Gliwice, Poland. |
"We're also hoping to be able to purchase our own building in Gliwice, next to the historic radio tower where World War II was triggered," Krol said. An attack on a radio station in Gliwice on Aug. 31, 1939, staged by the German secret police served as a pretext for Nazi Germany to invade Poland, marking the start of the war.
Ironically, CCM's first network station went on the air in O?wi?cim, named Auschwitz by the Germans during their occupation of Poland during World War II. This is where more than 1.1 million Jews died in a network of Nazi extermination and concentration camps from 1940 to 1945.
The initial CCM station, started through a partnership with HCJB Global in 1997, went on the air eight years after democracy was established in Poland.
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Polish staff at CCM Media's radio studios in O?wi?cim (Auschwitz). |
"While this award was a surprise to us, our goal is to introduce people to Christ, focusing on the most difficult group of listeners-people who are indifferent to religion or even antagonistic," Krol concluded. "Our real enemy is Satan who wants to enslave people in his kingdom. We constantly pray for wisdom and great ideas to further our means to see people saved."
Sources: HCJB Global, CCM Media