A Torah in space: Ten years without Ilan Ramon
As we commemorate a decade since the Columbia disaster it is important to pause and pay tribute to Ilan Ramon (1954-2003) and what he stood for. If one person could sum up the achievements and values of the Jewish State, and illustrate just how far Israel has come, that individual is Ilan Ramon.
Illustration (c) 2013, Tuvia Book
Ramon was born in the first decade of the States’ existence. His mother and grandmother were both survivors of Auschwitz and arrived in Israel to rebuild their shattered lives. His father fought in the War of Independence to allow his family to live in peace and security in the new Jewish State. Colonel Ramon, during his service in the Israeli air force, when asked if he would take part in a mission to bomb Iraq’s nuclear reactor in 1981 responded:
If I can help prevent a second Holocaust, I am prepared to sacrifice my life for this.
Ramon not only successfully completed this mission, but also became the first Israeli in space. His mission was deeply symbolic, as were many of the items he took with him into space, including a Torah Scroll that had been in Bergen-Belsen.
Ilan Ramon’s mission symbolised that Israel can go anywhere. He reminded us that we have revived our language, made the desert bloom, rebuilt our homeland, ingathered our exiles. That we have the ability to defend our homeland and protect Jews worldwide and we continue to reach for the stars.
“I think we have a great people in Israel, and we have to maintain our Jewish heritage,” he said in an address from the shuttle Columbia in space. “I think it’s very important to preserve our historical and religious traditions.” On carrying the Torah into space, he said:
This scroll symbolises, more than anything, the ability of the Jewish people to survive anything, including horrible periods, and go from the darkest days to days of hope and faith in the future.
May his memory and that of his son Assaf, who was killed in an Air Force training accident, be for a blessing and an inspirational example to us all! A fitting eulogy for such a selfless hero can be found in the words of another hero of the Jewish people, Chana Szenesh:
There are stars whose radiance is visible on earth though they have long been extinct.
There are people whose brilliance continues to light the world though they are no longer among the living.
These lights are particularly bright when the night is dark.
They light the way for mankind.
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Dr. Tuvia Book is the author of “For the Sake of Zion, A Curriculum of Israel Education” (Koren, 2017). His forthcoming book on the Second Temple Period, will be published by Koren this year. He also is a Ministry of Tourism licensed Tour Guide, Jewish educator and a Judaica artist. www.tuviabook.com
