Israel in Shock over Loss of Astronaut Ilan Ramon
Washington,
Feb. 1 2003 (VOA News) -- The news of the shuttle
disaster came at mid-afternoon Israel time. The crew
included Israel's first astronaut, Ilan Ramon.
Israelis
watched in shocked disbelief as television screens
carried the unmistakable images of a catastrophe.
It was especially meaningful for Israelis, who had
reacted with great national pride to this flight,
because it was carrying an Israeli astronaut.
The
office of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon issued a statement
saying the government
of Israel and the people of Israel "are as one
at this difficult time."
Ilan Ramon,
a colonel in the Israeli Air Force and former fighter
pilot, became the first Israeli to fly in space with
the launch of Columbia.
The 48-year-old
pilot was the son of a Holocaust survivor. His military
career included the bombing of an Iraqi nuclear reactor
in 1981. He also fought in the 1973 Arab-Israeli War
and the Lebanon War in 1982.
He served
as a fighter pilot in the1970s, '80s and early '90s.
He was chosen as Israel's first astronaut in 1997,
then moved to Houston the next year to train for shuttle
flight. His wife and four children live in Tel Aviv,
but were in Cape Canaveral, Florida, awaiting the
astronauts return from the Columbia mission.
He became
an overnight hero when Columbia lifted off 16 days
ago.
The launch
was covered live on Israeli TV, and it was front page
news in every paper.
One Israeli
TV network was carrying the landing of the Columbia
live when communication was lost.
Channel
Two had Colonel Ramon's 79-year-old father at the
station, and was preparing to interview him when the
first images appeared. The TV network said, however,
that he would not be available for comment.
Ilan
Ramon began preparing for his role as a payload specialist
on this Columbia flight in 1997. Much of the work
he did during the 16-day mission involved an Israel
Space Agency study of how desert dust and other contaminants
in Earth's atmosphere affect rainfall and temperature.
The Columbia
disaster comes as an especially bitter blow to most
Israelis, who had viewed the mission as a rare bright
spot during more than two years of violence and insecurity.
--
Larry James
- Voice of America in Jerusalem
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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