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Black
National Anthem
Played on Space Shuttle
The
seven-member Discovery crew awoke early Wednesday, July 5 to the sounds
of "Lift Every Voice and Sing,"
the Black national anthem. "That one is particularly dear to my heart
because ... after the day of o ur nation's independence,
it's very fitting because it reminds us that anyone and everyone can
participate
in the space program," astronaut Stephanie Wilson, only the second
Black woman in space, radioed to Mission Control. The mission is
scheduled to last for 12
days.
American Mae C. Jemison became the first Black women in space when NASA
blasted her into orbit aboard the space shuttle Endeavour, September
12, 1992. Cuban Arnaldo Tamayo-Mendez became the world’s first
Black astronaut on September 18,
1980.
The Johnson Brothers, James Weldon and John Rosamond, wrote the song in
their native city, Jacksonville, FL in 1900. The last line of the
last stanza reads: True to our God, true
to our native land.
Photo: Left to
Right, Stephanie Wilson of the United States. Arnaldo Tamayo-Mendez of Cuba.
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