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发信人: ersy (Green Mouse), 信区: Aero
标 题: Israel Mourns Space Shuttle Disaster(转载)
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2003年02月05日14:13:47 星期三), 站内信件
【 以下文字转载自 Green 讨论区 】
【 原文由 leonado 所发表 】
JERUSALEM Feb. 1 —
Israel's first astronaut, Ilan Ramon, gave a troubled country something to
cheer about when he blasted off last month on the space shuttle Columbia. The
shuttle's disintegration just before landing Saturday brought back a familiar
sense of dread.
"The state of Israel and its citizens are as one at this difficult time,"
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's office said in a statement.
While the tragedy shocked Israel, Ronit Federman, a friend of Ramon's since
their high school days 30 years ago, took comfort from e-mails she received
from the astronaut during his flight.
"I'm sure he was the most satisfied of people in his last moments," Federman
told Israel's Channel 10 television. "He wrote about the divine happiness of
looking at Earth. He wrote that he would like to keep floating for the rest
of his life. That was the last sentence he wrote to us."
Ramon, 48, was an air force colonel and the son of a Holocaust survivor. His
military career included the bombing of an Iraqi nuclear reactor in 1981.
He became a national hero overnight as newspapers featured him on the front
page, and Israel television stations carried live broadcasts of the Jan. 16
liftoff from Cape Canaveral, Fla.
Ramon's 79-year-old father Eliezer Wolferman was being interviewed live on
Channel Two television shortly before the scheduled landing Saturday. He said
he had kept in touch with his son via a video conference, and with e-mail.
The station broke away to its correspondent in Florida when word came that
ground controllers had lost touch with the shuttle. It explained later that
the elderly Ramon had left the studio.
Ramon's brother-in-law Gabi Bar sobbed as he spoke to television station a
short while later. "This is a moment of crisis," he said. "I don't know how
we can come to terms with the loss of Ilan."
Ramon's wife, Rona, and their four children, who have been living in Texas
for several years as Ramon prepared for the flight, were at Cape Canaveral
for the landing. NASA took the astronauts' families to a secluded place.
Ramon was selected in 1997 to be a payload specialist. He spent much of
Columbia's 16-day flight aiming cameras in an Israel Space Agency study of
how desert dust and other contaminants in Earth's atmosphere affect rainfall
and temperature.
For a few days, Ramon's journey, along with six American crewmates, diverted
attention from the grinding conflict with the Palestinians, which has seen 28
months of nonstop fighting.
The Israeli enthusiasm came partly from the fact that Ramon is one of the
country's top air force pilots, considered among the nation's military elite.
Ramon was not particularly religious but decided to eat kosher food in orbit.
"I'm secular in my background, but I'm going to respect all kinds of Jews all
over the world," Ramon said before his flight.
Ramon has logged thousands of hours of flight time and was part of the first
Israeli squad to pilot American-made F-16 fighter jets in 1980. He fought in
the Yom Kippur War in 1973 and in the 1982 war in Lebanon.
Ramon was one of the fighter pilots who destroyed an unfinished nuclear
reactor in Iraq in 1981, a senior Israeli government official said last month
on condition of anonymity.
The attack, in which eight F-16 warplanes obliterated the French-built Osirak
reactor near Baghdad, was a milestone for Israeli aviation because the planes
flew over enemy Arab territory for hours without detection. The pilots flew
in a tight formation to send off a radar signal resembling that of a large
commercial airliner.
Ramon, whose mother and grandmother survived the Auschwitz death camp in
World War II, honored those who endured the Holocaust. He carried a small
pencil drawing titled "Moon Landscape" by Peter Ginz, a 14-year-old Jewish
boy killed at Auschwitz.
He also packed a credit-card sized microfiche of the Bible given him by
Israeli President Moshe Katsav and some mezuzas small cases that are hung on
door frames of Jewish homes and contain biblical inscriptions.
Ramon's father gave him family photos to take into space and a brother had a
letter stowed away in the shuttle that Ramon read in orbit.
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