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Navajo Nation Radio Stations Are “Voices of Hope in the Desert,” Leaders Say

Full-power FM station launch highlights the significance, potential of this ministry.

Pieter Damsteegt, North American Division News

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Navajo Nation Radio Stations Are “Voices of Hope in the Desert,” Leaders Say
Radio studio of KDHH 89.5 FM, transmiting from Kaibeto, Arizona, United States. [Photo: Pieter Damsteegt]

On March 19, at precisely 4:24 p.m., the airwaves above Kaibeto, Arizona, United States, came alive with a message of hope. Diné Adventist Radio’s first full-power FM station—KDHH 89.5 FM—went live, reaching listeners across Tuba City, Kaibeto, and the Western Agency of the Navajo Nation. It was a quiet but powerful breakthrough for a project years in the making.

The first listener to respond was a woman en route to the hospital with her husband. She called to thank the station for “songs of hope” that encouraged her heart on a difficult drive.

That moment, and others like it, are exactly what the Diné Adventist Radio (DAR) team has been praying for since the dream was born five years ago. What began as a Sabbath afternoon conversation in a small room in Window Rock, Arizona, has grown into a cross-conference, cross-cultural media ministry aiming to reach 90 percent of the Navajo population with the Seventh-day Adventist message of hope, health, and healing.

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Dale and Nancy Wolcott pose by the KDHH 89.5 FM radio tower. [Photo: Steve Pester]


Radio That Reaches

“After 100 years of Adventist work among the Navajo people, they are still an unreached people group,” said Dale Wolcott, a pastor who has served across the Navajo Nation since 1990 and helped relaunch churches in Chinle and Window Rock. “Radio can reach places it would take missionaries years to reach.”

The Navajo Nation covers more than 27,000 square miles (almost 70,000 square kilometers) across Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. Many families live without internet, electricity, or television. But almost every household has a battery-powered radio.

That’s why DAR matters, leaders said. With the recent FCC approval of KDHH and other pending licenses, DAR is building a network of three full-power and four low-power FM stations. Combined with ongoing weekly programming on major tribal stations (such as KTNN) and a live global stream, the network is positioned to touch lives across reservation lines, state borders, and even generations.

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Kenneth Kirtley (left), Diné Adventist Radio’s program director, and Steve Pester, network manager, work on editing the radio programs at the radio’s first full-power FM station, KDHH 89.5 FM. [Photo: Steve Pester]


Voices From Within

At the heart of the project is a commitment to cultural authenticity. Most DAR programs are produced by Navajo Adventist members and friends, with content airing in both English and Navajo.

“We’re trying to help keep the language alive,” said Kenneth Kirtley, DAR’s program director. Married into a Navajo family and seasoned by 23 years in commercial radio, Kirtley brings technical expertise and deep respect to his role. “Translating programs into Navajo is one of our biggest challenges, but it’s also one of our greatest opportunities.”

His personal investment runs even deeper. After praying through months of uncertainty, he left a stable career to join the DAR team full-time just days before his own self-imposed deadline. “If that wasn’t a sign from God, I don’t know what is,” he said.

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The Holbrook and LaVida choirs perform during the Gallup Diné Adventist Radio Grand Opening celebration. [Photo: Steve Pester]


Miracles in the Margins

Dale Wolcott recalls a moment that captures the spirit of the project: “We were facing a US$15,000 bill to clear land for a tower site when I got a call out of the blue. A man from Black Mesa was trying to reach another church but got my number instead.”

It turned out that the man operated heavy equipment, and he offered to clear the land—for free—after Wolcott helped him and his longtime partner get married. 

“The next week the site was cleared,” Wolcott added.

Story after story like this fuels the team’s conviction that God is at work.

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The KDHH radio station in Pinon, Arizona. [Photo: Pieter Damsteegt]


What’s Next

With KDHH now live, the team is preparing to launch KDHP in Pinon (equipment installed, power pending) and begin construction on the flagship Gallup station, which still needs US$330,000 in funding.

Meanwhile, listeners are already responding. A recent program offering free GodPod devices loaded with bilingual content prompted 14 responses in just two minutes. Bible study requests continue to roll in from across the region.

And through it all, the DAR team keeps moving forward—producing new content, building relationships with tribal leaders, and praying for the resources, power lines, and personnel needed to reach the rest of the nation.

“We’re already hearing from people in places where we don’t even have churches,” Wolcott said. “Radio is going to places we could never reach otherwise.”


From Static to Signal

Wolcott, Kirtley, network manager Steve Pester, and a growing team of producers and volunteers continue working toward the dream: a network of fully Navajo-produced content, broadcasting 24/7 to the entire Navajo Nation and beyond.

“This is not just about launching a radio station,” Pester said. “It’s about being a voice of hope in every hogan, every truck, every quiet corner of the desert.”

One signal is live. More are coming. The desert is listening.

The original version of this story was posted on the North American Division news site.

Pieter Damsteegt, North American Division News

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