The first nation to land on the lunar south pole, after having failed the same attempt in 2019, India has erupted in celebration
Bengaluru: It was an ‘Over the Moon’ moment for all Indians when the nation’s third lunar probe, Chandrayaan-3, scripted history, touching down in the South Pole region of Earth’s nearest cosmic neighbor with clockwork precision on Wednesday evening.
The Moon landing set off celebrations across the country of 1.4 billion people: fireworks, dances, distribution of sweets and the sound of slogans like “India is a superpower!”
In Bengaluru, the home of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), school and college students waved the Indian tricolor high in the air while staffers returning home from work stopped to stare at the Moon, their smiles from ear to ear. Some others posed for pictures with cut-outs and models of Chandrayaan-3 and the GSLV rocket.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who witnessed the historic moment from Johannesburg, South Africa, where he is attending the BRICS summit, remarked about the historic feat while addressing Team ISRO: “This moment is unforgettable, unprecedented. This moment is the victory cry of a developed India. This moment is the triumph of the new India. This moment signifies new energy, belief, and consciousness in India. This moment is the call of India’s ascending destiny.”
At ISRO’s Telemetry, Tracking and Command (ISTRAC) Network station, where S Smoanath, Chairman of the ISRO, and his colleagues monitored the descent and landing, everyone seemed relaxed as they sat with their eyes transfixed on mission computers. At the scheduled hour, 5:44 pm Indian time, Vikram, the Indian space agency’s lander, cradling a rover, Pragyan, cruised gracefully, hovered over the lunar soil, peered at the landing site, and descended for a smooth landing. A few minutes later, the rover slid down the ramp for a stroll on the alien terrain.