Global Times

60 years of Russians in space

Cosmonauti­cs Day marked with nostalgia and pride

-

Russians on Monday celebrate the 60th anniversar­y of the first manned flight to space carried out by cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin as the Soviet hero remains one of the most admired figures in the country.

Russian President Vladimir Putin was expected to travel to Engels, a city in the south of the country on the banks of the Volga River, to the site of the cosmonaut’s landing where a memorial stands to honor the historic flight.

The anniversar­y of the spacefligh­t is a “day of national pride” for Russia, Putin’s spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov said.

On April 12, 1961, Gagarin’s Vostok spacecraft took off from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, then part of the Soviet Union, as the 27- year- old cosmonaut exclaimed his iconic catchphras­e “Let’s go!”

His flight lasted just 108 minutes, the time it took to complete one loop around the Earth, before returning to home soil.

The legend of the man who rose from humble beginnings to become a Soviet hero lives on today and the day of Gagarin’s flight is celebrated every year in

Russia as Cosmonauti­cs Day.

His now rusty Vostok capsule is on display at Moscow’s Museum of Cosmonauti­cs where an exhibition dedicated to Gagarin is set to open on Tuesday. Visitors will be shown documents, photos and personal belongings of Gagarin, some dating back to his childhood and school years.

“This is probably the only surname that everyone knows, from 4- year- old children to people over 80,” said Vyacheslav Klimentov, historian and the museum’s deputy director of research.

“I would say that Gagarin’s feat, that saw a man go to space for the first time, bonds all Russians together,” he added.

Gagarin’s flight remains a source of national pride in Russia and a symbol of the Soviet

Union’s dominance in space during that era. Four years before Gagarin, the USSR had already become the first country to send into orbit a satellite called Sputnik.

Sixty years on, Russia continues to frequently send its cosmonauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station. On Friday, a Russian Soyuz spacecraft, honoring the anniversar­y of Gagarin’s flight, blasted off from the Baikonur cosmodrome with two Russians and a US astronaut on board.

The anniversar­y also comes at a difficult time for Russia’s space industry, which has suffered a number of setbacks recently, from corruption scandals to an aborted takeoff in 2018.

Gagarin’s flight lasted just 108 minutes, the time it took to complete one loop around the Earth, before returning to home soil.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? A Russian woman holding a portrait of Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin stands on Moscow’s Manezhnaya Square prior to a flower laying ceremony at the grave of Yuri Gagarin by the Kremlin Wall on the 60th anniversar­y of his flight, on Monday.
Photo: AFP A Russian woman holding a portrait of Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin stands on Moscow’s Manezhnaya Square prior to a flower laying ceremony at the grave of Yuri Gagarin by the Kremlin Wall on the 60th anniversar­y of his flight, on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China