![]() |
| Columbia Tragedy |
| Ode to Ramon |
![]() Ilan Ramon was not the first Jew to travel outside the earth’s atmosphere, but his voyage was certainly the most special for us. He was the first to go not as an individual, but as the representative of the entire Jewish people. That is why, although he did not identify as an observant Jew, he insisted that NASA provide him only kosher food. He hung a mezuzah on one of the portals of his capsule. In his bag was a book of Psalms and a dollar bill from the Lubavitcher Rebbe. As he passed over Jerusalem, he said the Shema Yisrael. And the whole world watched as he lifted a small Torah scroll that had miraculously survived Auschwitz. Why the Almighty took him and the other six astronauts from us as He did, I will not even venture to know. But I must admit that, in so many ways, I envy him. Sure, I envy all those who get to travel to outer space—but nobody ever carried anything like his kind of baggage. You could say that he took an entire nation—3400 years of history included—to the heavens. Proving that none of us, no matter how far we may journey, ever goes alone. Ode to Ramon February 3, 2003 He was all of us As Colonel Ramon pierced the firmament of planet Earth He held my hand, too, and the hand of every one of us that ever was Not Sefardi, not Ashkenazi A Jew. And in that final moment of a space pilot’s glory In that ultimate moment of supreme oneness, And the vast emptiness beyond There is hope, for we are one. |
By Tzvi Freeman Rabbi Tzvi Freeman, a senior editor at Chabad.org, also heads our Ask The Rabbi team. He is the author of Bringing Heaven Down to Earth. To subscribe to regular updates of Rabbi Freeman's writing, visit Freeman Files subscription.
|