Contact Us
China's Woman Astronaut Sends Int'l Women's Day Greetings from SpaceMarch 8, 2022
"I hope all girls with space dreams guard your vision of going to the sea of stars. One day, before you know it, when you look up, you will see that your dream is already within reach," said Wang Yaping, China's second woman astronaut. GENEVA, March 7 (Xinhua) — Wang Yaping, China's second woman astronaut who is now on a six-month mission on board the country's Space Station, has recently recorded a video message for the United Nations (UN) office in Geneva, Switzerland, sending her greetings to women around the world on the occasion of International Women's Day on March 8. "I hope all girls with space dreams guard your vision of going to the sea of stars. One day, before you know it, when you look up, you will see that your dream is already within reach," Wang said. She said that space has never changed its environment or lowered its threshold because of the arrival of women, and that ample flight data show that there are no significant differences in the ability of the sexes to adapt and work in space. Women "can all complete the same training and assessment as men astronauts at a high standard. And many physical and psychological characteristics of women can play an advantage in space, being complementary to men astronauts," she said. "It is conceivable that more and more women will participate in manned spaceflight missions. It will have a very important impact on the large-scale and long-term human exploration of space in the future," she said.
"Ladies, although our nationalities, ethnicities and occupations are different, but women all over the world are making the world more vibrant and more harmonious and warmer through their own efforts," she said. "I would like to take this opportunity to thank every women for their selfless dedication, I also wish every women would pick the brightest stars for the lives and careers we love in our own starry sky." Wang and two other astronauts went into space onboard the Shenzhou-13 spaceship and entered the space station on Oct. 16, 2021, embarking on the six-month space mission. The trio has been in orbit for more than 130 days, with Wang setting a record for the most days in space by a Chinese astronaut. In her first space mission, Wang, who once dreamed of being a teacher, delivered a 40-minute open class, China's first live space lecture, in the Shenzhou-10 spaceship on June 20, 2013, to over 60 million schoolchildren nationwide. "I love to be a space teacher, facing the lovely children in front of the screen, including my daughter," Wang said in the video message. Eight years later, she delivered another live space lecture in China's space station on Dec. 9, 2021.
(Source: Xinhua) 32.3KPlease understand that womenofchina.cn,a non-profit, information-communication website, cannot reach every writer before using articles and images. For copyright issues, please contact us by emailing: [email protected]. The articles published and opinions expressed on this website represent the opinions of writers and are not necessarily shared by womenofchina.cn. CommentsMagazinesProjects
Photos
Special Coverage |
AI governance should be on security agendaSuspected arson latest challenge for Tesla in EuropeChinese researchers prove presence of ocean on MarsEnergy cooperation empowers Belt and RoadXi Focus: Xi Calls on Jiangxi to Write Its Chapter in Chinese ModernizationImages: 2023 World Internet of Things ExpositionWorld's first 300IT helps legislators perform tasks betterXi Story: Environment First for the Yangtze RiverCar sales expected to grow 3% in 2023