INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION (VosIzNeias) – Swedish-US national astronaut Jessica Meir released three images of the State of Israel and its surroundings taken by the International Space Station where she has been staying since September.
Since the first spacewalk in 1965, there have been 227 spacewalkers, only 14 of them women. Meir became No. 15. All but one of these women has been American, Times Of Israel reported.
Meir posted the images in a Twitter post, writing: “My father’s globe spanning journey as a surgeon from the Middle East, to Europe, and eventually to the U.S. was an inspiration to many in my immediate and extended family.”
Meir was born in Caribou, Maine, to a Swedish mother who was a nurse and an Iraqi father of Iraqi-Jewish descent, who worked as a physician. Meir’s father was born in Iraq and moved to Israel as a child. He later moved to Sweden where he met Meir’s mother who grew up in a Christian family. The couple moved to Maine where Meir was born.
Although her mother did not convert, Meir grew up attending synagogue in Presque Isle, Maine. She was inspired to venture into space after watching the Space Shuttle missions on television. Meir knew no one who worked for NASA or for the space program. She attributes her abiding dream of personally participating in space exploration to the love of nature she learned from her mother, and from her father’s predilection for wandering and adventure. “And it might have had something to do with the fact that the stars shone so brightly in rural Maine”, Meir added.
“Personally I’m not really a religious person,” she told The Jerusalem Post, “but I think that my Jewish cultural background is obviously a big part of my culture and especially traditions.”