Posted on 09/18/2006 10:26:16 PM PDT by MadIvan
AS A young girl in Iran, Anousheh Ansari would stare in wonder at the stars and dream of joining them in the blackness of space.
Yesterday, a week after her 40th birthday, she made her dream come true. At an estimated cost of $20 million (£11 million), Mrs Ansari became the first woman space tourist after blasting off in a Russian Soyuz rocket from Star City in Kazakhstan.
As the first Iranian-born astronaut was circling Earth last night, her remarkable journey from Tehran to the International Space Station was being hailed also as evidence of the continued power of another dream: the American one.
Mrs Ansari was 16 when her family emigrated in 1984 as the Islamic Revolution in Iran was at its peak and girls faced a strictly limited future. Her parents said that they wanted her to be able to pursue her passion for science.
She arrived speaking only French and Farsi, became an American citizen and quickly immersed herself in the study of electronics, receiving degrees in electrical engineering and computer science at George Mason University in Virginia and George Washington University in Washington.
Mrs Ansari joined a telecommunications company, where she met her husband, Hamid. In 1993 she persuaded him and his brother to pool their savings and set up Telecom Technologies, a supplier of communication networks, just as the industry in America was deregulating.
The start-up grew rapidly to employ 250 people and turned the Ansaris into telecom tycoons when the business was sold for hundreds of millions of dollars in 2000.
Mrs Ansari turned her eyes again to the stars. She gave $10 million in 2002 to the X Prize Foundation, set up to encourage advances in human spaceflight, as a prize for the first private venture to launch a reusable spacecraft into space twice in two weeks.
The Ansari X Prize was claimed in 2004 by Mojave Aerospace Ventures.
When the impoverished Russian space programme at the Baikonur centre in Star City began accepting paying passengers on missions, it was only a matter of time before Mrs Ansari signed up.
Space Adventures, the American firm that markets the trips, does not disclose the price but is understood to charge $20 million a ticket, most of which goes to the Russians.
Six months of intensive training has prepared Mrs Ansari for the 11-day spaceflight with two professional astronauts, Michael López-Alegría, from Nasa, and the Russian Mikhail Tyurin. They are due to dock tomorrow at the space station, where Mrs Ansari will spend eight days before returning to Earth with the departing crew, Pavel Vinogradov, of Russia, and the American , Jeffrey Williams, on September 29.
Mrs Ansari, who recently described space as being in my soul and in my heart, said before take-off that she was looking forward to seeing Iran again from high above Earth. She has not been back since she left.
She hopes that a new generation of girls with similarly big dreams will be staring back at her up among the stars. She said: I hope to inspire everyone especially young people, women and young girls all over the world, and in Middle Eastern countries that do not provide women with the same opportunities as men to not give up their dreams and to pursue them.
It may seem impossible to them at times. But I believe they can realise their dream if they keep it in their hearts, nurture it and look for opportunities and make those opportunities happen.
Mrs Ansaris family were at Baikonur to witness the dream and they celebrated with champagne and tears as the rocket took off in a plume of flame and smoke.
Her mother, Fakhri Shahidi, said: Its hard to believe my daughter is going to space. I pray with all my heart shes coming back soon.
Russia is the only country to offer space tourism for those able to afford the hefty fee, and Mrs Ansari is its fourth paying customer. She had been scheduled to go later but got her seat on this mission when Russian officials withdrew Daisuke Enomoto, a Japanese businessman, for unspecified medical reasons.
Mrs Ansari has said that she detests the term space tourist, preferring to see herself as an ambassador for a new wave of private explorers at Earths final frontier.
She told an interviewer: Tourists are people who just buy a ticket and then they go. They dont train for six months and try to learn every system.
bttt
BTTT
Awesome.
If you bother to read about her, she escaped Iran to live in the modren era....
Thanks, Kevin!
I'm always elated when a woman is able to "strut her stuff" for all the world to see!
WOO-HOO!
Excellent advertisement for the meaning of FREEDOM!
I think our Founding Fathers would be pleased about this..
So do I!
And I have that on good authority! *wink-wink*
(Some of my folks were here to meet the rest of my folks who came off the Mayflower!)
I would love to be in her shoes right about now! What an ambassador!
Smart girls rule!!!
Wonderful spirit, hopes and dreams become real, wonderful story!
ping
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