Toronto Star

Cosmic smiley face enthralled world

How a photograph from the moon helped humans rediscover Earth

- DENNIS OVERBYE

This is where we live. In space. On a marble fortified against bottomless blackness by a shell of air and colour, fragile and miraculous as a soap bubble.

In 1968, we Earthlings knew that already, sort of. But that abstract notion became visceral on Christmas Eve that year.

While scouting landing spots on the moon, the astronauts of Apollo 8 — Frank Borman, William Anders and James Lovell Jr. — spied the shiny blue Earth rising over the ash-coloured lunar mountains like a cosmic smiley face.

That image, transmitte­d from space, went on to capture the imaginatio­n of the world: Earthrise.

Anders had the job of photograph­ing the lunar landscape. When Earth rose, a robot would have kept on clicking off pictures of the craters.

Indeed the astronauts briefly joked about whether they should break off and aim their cameras up. “Hey don’t take that, it’s not scheduled,” Borman said. Then, like good humans, they grabbed cameras and clicked away.

“Earthrise” did not start environmen­talism, but it became the movement’s icon, a gift of perspectiv­e at the end of a long, dark year.

If you were young, 1968 was the best of times and the worst of times.

The Beatles were still together. Star Trek was on TV. You could get high and watch 2001:

A Space Odyssey at the movies. These cultural facets were products of a decade when technologi­cal optimism had reigned: You could wage war against communists in Southeast Asia and against poverty and discrimina­tion at home, and conquer space on the side.

But by the end of the decade, pessimism was ascendant. There was no peace or end in sight in Vietnam, nor on the streets at home, roiling with protests, assassinat­ions and riots.

In space, the United States trailed the Soviet Union in a peaceful, but symbolic, technologi­cal competitio­n.

The launch of Sputnik, the first Earth-orbiting satellite, startled the world in 1957, and America had been struggling to catch up ever since.

President John F. Kennedy committed the United States to landing on the moon before the end of the 1960s.

But in January196­7, a fire in an Apollo capsule killed three astronauts, delaying the project and threatenin­g the deadline.

Meanwhile, the Soviets had begun sending uncrewed spaceships around the moon. In April 1968, intelligen­ce agen- cies warned that the enemy was gearing up to try to send a man around the moon as early as that autumn.

But by the end of 1968, the United States had pulled even and taken the lead in the race to land humans on the moon.

That goal was achieved by Apollo 11 on July 20 of the following year — an event that will be widely celebrated on its 50th anniversar­y in 2019.

But a proper observance begins with Apollo 8’s Christmas Eve loop around the moon: The first indication the Americans might get there first.

Apollo 8’s original mission was to carry a crew of three around Earth, in a command module that had been redesigned and rebuilt since one of its prede- cessors burned up on the launch pad in 1967.

The mission, slotted for December, would mark the first crewed flight of the mighty Saturn 5 rocket.

In those days, NASA’s leaders were still willing to gamble — and so, in August, the plan changed. Borman was called into a closed-door meeting: Would he like to go around the moon in December?

It was an offer no astronaut worth his salt could refuse, never mind that no one had flown on a Saturn 5 yet.

Within weeks the prospectiv­e mission had morphed further, from simply looping around the moon to braking and completing an orbit around it. This was a far riskier venture: If the com- mand module rocket failed to fire and break them out of orbit, the astronauts would never come home.

In September, while NASA pondered the mission, the Soviets kept busy, launching a rocket, Zond 5, around the moon and safely returning its crew of worms and tortoises.

The Apollo 8 flight was not approved until October, after a crewed flight of Apollo 7 had tested the newly rebuilt command module.

On Nov. 11, NASA publicly announced it would be shooting for the moon the following month.

By then, Zond 6 was on its way — uncrewed, but who knew what might be next.

“The September Zond flight scared NASA that the Russians might one-up them one more time by doing it again just before Apollo 8, this time with a cosmonaut aboard,” Roger Launius, NASA’s former chief historian, said recently in an email.

(Zond 6 crashed on returning to Earth.)

Apollo 8 blasted off on Dec. 21. Things did not go smoothly at first.

On the way to the moon, Borman became terribly sick, forcing his crewmates to dodge specks of vomit and other bodily excretions, according to Robert Kurson’s book Rocket Men: The Daring Odyssey of Apollo 8 and the Astronauts Who Made Man’s First Journey to the Moon.

They chose not to tell Mission Control about it until he had improved, fearing the mission would be aborted.

All of Earth held its breath when the spacecraft went out of view around the moon, entering radio silence, for the engine burn that would put it into lunar orbit.

Seventeen hours later, on Christmas Eve, what NASA has described as the biggest broadcast audience in history was listening when the opening lines of Genesis came crackling down from the heavens.

“In the beginning, God created the heaven and the Earth,” Anders began. “And God saw that it was good,” Borman said.

At Mission Control, the rocket engineers all began to cry, according to Kurson’s book. Like I said, it had been a long year.

It would take a little while longer for the world to realize that Apollo 8’s greatest legacy would be a single photograph of home.

The residents of the only known inhabited planet in the universe would “know the place for the first time” (to borrow from T.S. Eliot).

Sent to examine the Moon, Anders later said, humans instead discovered Earth.

A holiday present for the ages. Alas, it didn’t come with an instructio­n manual.

We’re still working on that.

“In the beginning, God created the heaven and the Earth.” WILLIAM ANDERS ON APOLLO 8 AS IT EMERGED FROM THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON

 ?? WILLIAM ANDERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? This Dec. 24, 1968, NASA photo shows the Earth behind the surface of the moon during the Apollo 8 mission.
WILLIAM ANDERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO This Dec. 24, 1968, NASA photo shows the Earth behind the surface of the moon during the Apollo 8 mission.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Apollo 8 astronauts, from left, James Lovell Jr., William Anders and Frank Borman, in front of the mission simulator.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Apollo 8 astronauts, from left, James Lovell Jr., William Anders and Frank Borman, in front of the mission simulator.

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