City
Epaper

"Greetings from the ISS": NASA astronaut Sunita Williams extends wishes Diwali wishes from space

By ANI | Updated: October 29, 2024 05:00 IST

Washington DC [US], October 29 : NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, who has been in space for nearly five months, ...

Open in App

Washington DC [US], October 29 : NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, who has been in space for nearly five months, extended her warmest wishes for Diwali to those celebrating the festival in the United States and around the globe.

In a video message shared from the International Space Station (ISS), the Indian-origin astronaut said that this year she had the unique opportunity to observe Diwali from 260 miles above Earth and reminisced about her father's efforts to keep their cultural roots alive by teaching her and her family about Diwali and other Indian festivals.

"Greetings from the ISS," Williams said. "I want to extend my warmest wishes for a Happy Diwali to everyone celebrating today at the White House and around the world."

"This year I have the unique opportunity to celebrate Diwali from 260 miles above the earth on the ISS...My father kept and shared his cultural roots by teaching us about Diwali and other Indian festivals," she further said.

She emphasised the festival's message of hope and renewal, saying that Diwali is a time of joy as goodness in the world prevails.

Williams also expressed gratitude to US President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris for their participation in the Diwali festivities and for recognising the contributions of the community.

"Diwali is a time of joy as goodness in the world prevails...Thank you to the President and the Vice President for celebrating Diwali with our community today and for recognising the many contributions of our community," she said.

The message was particularly poignant as it came during a special Diwali celebration held at the White House.

Notably, Sunita Williams along with her fellow astronaut Butch Willmore have been at the ISS since June. The pair had launched aboard Boeing's Starliner spacecraft on June 5 for its first crewed flight, arriving at the space station on June 6.

A decision was made to return Starliner to Earth without its crew, and the spacecraft successfully returned on September 6 after NASA in August said that it was "too risky" to bring Wilmore and Williams back to Earth.

Wilmore and Williams continued their work formally as part of the expedition and will return in February next year. This means what would have been a week-long test flight, extended to around 8 months.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalHamas agrees to release Israeli hostages, offers support to Trump's Gaza peace plan

Entertainment"Artists used to wear Salwar Kameez to collect award": Tamannaah Bhatia on changes at Filmfare Awards

Other SportsNishad Kumar, Simran Sharma shine as India continues strong run at World Para Athletics Championships 2025

CricketSecond Unofficial One-Day: Tilak's 94 goes in vain as Australia A blow away India A to level series 1-1

EntertainmentKim Kardashian-produced Elizabeth Taylor Docuseries to out on October 6

International Realted Stories

International"Anything that happens in neighbourhood, repercussions on India can be huge:" Former diplomat Ashok Sajjanhar on Nepal crisis

InternationalDeath toll rise to 10 in Indonesia boarding school building collapse

International"India, Russia enjoy special, privileged strategic partnership": MEA on 25 years special partnership

International"It has negative impact on all of us": Special International Trade Advisor to Indonesian President on US tariffs

InternationalIndian envoy Kwatra meets US Congressman Greg Murphy discuss bilateral ties