Planet Earth, you are a crew: Artemis II after returning from the Moon
The Artemis II crew returned to Earth on April 11, 2026 after a record-breaking lunar flyby, becoming the first humans to travel to the Moon in over 50 years.
by Radifah Kabir · India TodayIn Short
- Christina Koch called Earth a lifeboat hanging in the universe.
- Jeremy Hansen told the crowd: "We are a mirror reflecting you."
- Artemis II broke the record for the farthest human spaceflight.
The Artemis II astronauts came back from the Moon with more than mission data. They came back with something harder to measure: a shift in how they see the world, and perhaps, how the world should see itself.
On April 12, 2026, the four astronauts of Nasa's Artemis II mission, Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, stood on stage at Ellington Field, Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, less than 24 hours after splashing down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego.
The homecoming was visibly emotional. So was the room in Houston.
PLANET EARTH, YOU'RE A CREW: CHRISTINA KOCH
Koch, the first woman to travel to the Moon, said she could not sleep the night before, so she prepared remarks.
She spoke about what it means to truly be part of a crew, a word she said she finally understood after 10 days aboard the Orion spacecraft, the capsule that carried them around the Moon and back.
“A crew is a group that is in it all the time, no matter what, that is stroking together every minute with the same purpose, that is willing to sacrifice silently for each other, that gives grace, that holds accountable,” Koch said. “A crew has the same cares and the same needs, and a crew is inescapably, beautifully, dutifully linked.”
Then she described what she saw through the window of Orion, and it stopped the room.
“Honestly, what struck me wasn’t necessarily just Earth, it was all the blackness around it. Earth was just this lifeboat hanging undisturbed in the universe,” she said. “Planet Earth, you are a crew.”
A lifeboat is exactly what it sounds like: a vessel keeping its passengers alive in an otherwise hostile environment.
From about 4,06,938 kilometres away, that is precisely what Earth looked like to Koch. Not powerful or permanent, but small, isolated, and shared.
WE ARE A MIRROR, REFLECTING YOU: JEREMY HANSEN
Hansen, the first non-American to orbit the Moon, asked his crew mates to stand beside him as he addressed the audience. His words were a quiet challenge.
“When you look up here, you are not looking at us,” he said. “We are a mirror, reflecting you, and if you like what you see, then just look a little deeper. This is you.”
'WE ARE BONDED FOREVER': REID WISEMAN
Wiseman, visibly emotional, spoke about the bond forged between the four of them in the tight confines of the Orion capsule, roughly five metres wide, during their nearly 10-day, 1,118,793-kilometre journey around the Moon and back.
“Victor, Christina and Jeremy, we are bonded forever, and no one down here is ever going to know what the four of us just went through,” Wiseman said. "It's a special thing to be a human, and it's a special thing to be on planet Earth."
GRATITUDE IS TOO BIG TO BE IN ONE BODY: VICTOR GLOVER
Glover, the first African-American to travel to the Moon, spoke of gratitude that he said felt too large for one person to contain.
“The gratitude of seeing what we saw, doing what we did, and being with who I was with, it's too big to just be in one body,” he said.
Artemis II was the first crewed lunar mission in more than 50 years, since Apollo 17 in 1972.
It was a test flight designed to prove that the Orion spacecraft and its systems could carry humans safely around the Moon before Artemis IV attempts an actual crewed lunar landing, currently expected in 2028.
The crew has now begun post-flight medical evaluations and debriefs. But the words they left behind on that Houston stage may take considerably longer to process.
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