Tonight on PBS you can see Space Shuttle Columbia: Mission of Hope, marking the 10th anniversary of the shuttle disaster. The PBS special will primarily highlight the life of Colonel Ilan Ramon, a fighter pilot and son of Holocaust survivors who became the first astronaut from Israel. Here is PBS's description of tonight's program:
Space Shuttle Columbia: Mission of Hope goes behind the
scenes to explore the “mission within the mission” for Ramon, who
carried into space a miniature Torah scroll that had survived the
horrors of the Holocaust, given to a boy in a secret bar mitzvah
observed in the pre-dawn hours in the notorious Nazi concentration camp
of Bergen-Belsen. The bar mitzvah boy grew up to become Israel’s lead
scientist for the mission, Joachim “Yoya” Joseph.
The film follows the scroll’s path into Ramon’s hands, and the
dramatic moment when he tells its story live to the world from the
flight deck of Columbia. From the depths of hell to the heights of
space, his simple gesture would serve to honor the hope of a nation and
to fulfill a promise made to generations past and future.
Space Shuttle Columbia: Mission of Hope includes drawings
from the concentration camp made in secret by a camp inmate, and
archival NASA footage of the astronauts as they prepared for their
mission. Interviewees include Ilan Ramon’s widow, Rona Ramon, and other
Columbia crew family members; astronaut Garrett Reisman and other
members of NASA’s space program; Canadian astronaut Steve MacLean;
former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres and many others. The film was
shot on location throughout the world, from Jerusalem to the Kennedy
Space Center to Washington, D.C.