Posted on 01/20/2015 2:58:06 PM PST by NEWwoman
The first man in outer space 50 years ago believed fervently in the Almighty even though the atheistic Soviet government put famous words in his mouth that he had looked around at the cosmos and did not see God. Mankinds first space flight lasted 108 minutes on April 12, 1961.
It was the height of the Cold War. Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin was proclaimed by the Soviet leadership to have announced, I went up to space, but I didnt encounter God. However, he never uttered those often-quoted words, says a close friend. And it seems that the Soviet Union lied about a number of aspects of the 1961 space flight.
For example, they covered up the fact that he landed more than 200 miles away from where they were expecting him, a new book discloses. The Soviets trumpeted his mission, the first manned flight into space, as a major Cold War propaganda coup, portraying it as a glitch-free triumph of Communist ideology, writes Russian journalist Anton Pervushin in his book, 108 Minutes That Changed the World. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, in line with the official atheistic Soviet line, proclaimed that Gagarin had told him the famous line about not seeing God in space.
But nobody else ever heard Gagarin say it and he never repeated it. In fact he was a baptized member of the Russian Orthodox Church. Due to Soviet repression of Christianity, he kept that to himself.
A new book published on the eve of the 50th anniversary of Gagarins famous flight reveals that Soviet scientists severely miscalculated where he would land. For many years Soviet literature claimed that Yuri Gagarin and his Vostok I landing capsule had come down in the area it was supposed to, writes Pervushin. They had been expecting Gagarin to land almost 250 miles further to the south So it turned out that nobody was waiting or looking for Yuri Gagarin. Therefore the first thing he had to do after landing was set off to look for people so he could tell the leadership where he was.
The Soviets also lied about the manner of his landing, claiming that he had touched down inside the capsule which landed on dry land, unlike American space capsules, which splashed down in water. In fact, Gagarin bailed out and landed by parachute. The book reveals a touching letter Gagarin wrote to his family before the mission in which he pondered his own mortality, telling his wife not to die of grief if he never returned. After all life is life and there is no guarantee for anybody that tomorrow a car might not end ones life.
Earlier, the Soviets had sent Laika, a dog, but had made no provision for her to return to earth so she died in orbit. Gagarin also became well-known for the phrase he is said to have stated, a phrase that was used extensively by the atheist propaganda of the time, writes Nafpaktos Hierotheos Vlachos, the head of todays Russian Orthodox Church. And I say he is said to have stated.'
In fact, Gagarin was a baptized faithful throughout all his life, says General Valentin Petrov, Professor of the Russian Air Force Academy and a personal friend of the cosmonaut. He always confessed God whenever he was provoked, no matter where he was. In a 2007 article titled Yuri Gagarin, the Christian, by Maria Biniari, she wrote on his birthday in 1964, he visited a monastery, the Lavra of Saint Serge, and met with the Prior the monk in charge.
There, he had a photo taken of himself, which he told the priest this is for those who dont believe. He signed it with my best wishes, Yuri Gagarin. That famous phrase which has been ascribed to him, well, in actual fact it was Khrushchev who had said it, says Petrov. It was heard during a meeting of the Central Committee, whose desire it was to promulgate anti-religious propaganda.
Khrushchev had mockingly addressed the following words: Why didnt you step on the brakes in front of God? Here is Gagarin, who flew up to space, and yet, even he didnt see God anywhere. Immediately after that, those words were placed into anothers mouth, because the people would have believed more in Gagarins words than Khrushchevs, says Petrov. In fact, Gagarin should be remembered for completely different words, says his friend: I always remember that Yuri Gagarin said: An astronaut cannot be suspended in space and not have God in his mind and his heart.
I remember John Glenn’s first orbital flight, Feb. 20, 1962. I was a student in IBM’s Customer Engineer School in Endicott, NY and it was snowing like crazy up there. Those were the days of the old 80 column punched cards.
I would think that someone who was likely to meet his creator on such a mission (considering the quality of Soviet engineering) would have an abiding faith in God and Christ. Because he would need that sort of divine providence to come out the other side alive, rather than as space junk.
Genna Sosonko “The World Champions I Knew.” New in Chess, 2013
Smyslov:
On religion: “He himself said that he had been a believer, albeit secretly, from a young age... He wore a cross on a gold chain, and during our walks, if there was an opportunity, he would go into a church, light a candle, and cross himself in front of the icons.” p.114
On Lenin: “He always avoided saying the name Lenin, even in the Soviet era. He would even say ‘When I was playing in the national championship in Petersburg in 1961’, using the pre-Soviet name of Leningrad. He called Lenin ‘the Antichrist’, whose embalmed corpse should have been taken out of Red Square a long time ago.” p.118
On Smyslov’s mild temperament: “I could literally count the number of times I saw him angry. I remember one case very well... I said that there had been an assassination attempt on the Pope in Rome... and they’d caught the shooter.”
Smyslov: “They caught him? That kind of villain should immediately be hanged in public in St. Peter’s Square, to teach others a lesson. And not just hanged, but by the balls...” p.116
American astronaut: "All you had to do was step outside your capsule, and you would have!"
I'm glad Admiral Shepard's hours and hours of holds and the coffee he eventually had to let loose in his suit didn't eventually become a tradition. Maybe that was because, as I recall the day of that incident, he didn't actually fly. They scrubbed, and waited for another day, though the secret of who, among the Original Seven would fly first was out of the bag.
Appreciated the post, by the way. Much thanks.
bump
Just think, when someday the aliens recover the capsule
and body of Laika, they will be amazed that dogs could
build technology like that without hands...
Too bad, I rather liked the Idea of a mummified dog in
orbit.
That rocket would have to be 3 maybe 4 times that large to hold a man.
Something I remember from “Zoolander”.
Thanks for the ping. I didn't know this.
So true! ;)
I remember those punch cards, Tucker39. They were good for index cards and print outs for scrap paper.
Amen, Ouderkirk.
Thanks for sharing, Richard. I learn so much on this site.
LOL!
Back at you, Prospero. :)
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