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Jerusalem Report logo small (credit: JPOST STAFF)

3, 2, 1…liftoff! The energy on the live broadcast was palpable as second-Israeli astronaut Eytan Stibbe blasted off to space aboard a SpaceX Dragon capsule with the rest of his Ax-1 crew. Thousands watched Stibbe make his way to the terminal and Launch Pad 39a - which is where Neil Armstrong first set forth to the Moon. Crowds cheered and many held bated breaths as the capsule quickly left Earth’s atmosphere and made its way toward its final destination: the International Space Station, where Stibbe would be the first Israeli and third Jewish astronaut (after NASA astronauts Garrett Reisman and Jessica Meir) to ever step foot - nay, float around its corridors. “It’s the first time we can speak Hebrew aboard the ISS,” he said, shortly after docking. The mission was also the first private-manned mission, sponsored by Axiom Space, to send non-government-trained astronauts beyond Earth’s reaches. 

And spending Passover aboard the station wasn’t something Stibbe planned either. With a dose of holiday cheer, Rabbi Zvi Konikov of Chabad of the Space & Treasure Coasts, gladly packed Stibbe a case of shmurah matzah, a haggadah, and four small cartons of grape juice to drink during the Seder night. Celebrating Passover aboard the station is “a whole new thing,” Stibbe quipped during a press conference prior to his flight. He also took with him a variety of other patriotic items, including a flag of the State of Israel, a dreidel, a ten-shekel coin, a nano-sized version of the Bible, an Israeli Air Force flight pin, and more.

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