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Watch: Artemis astronaut’s loving gesture to family goes viral; he lost wife to cancer in 2020

FP News Desk April 2, 2026, 12:39:10 IST

Nasa’s Artemis II lifts off in a historic return to the Moon, but an emotional moment defines the mission as Commander Reid Wiseman, who lost his wife in 2020, shares a quiet gesture with his daughters before launch.

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Astronauts , from left, Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, of Canada, Pilot Victor Glover, Commander Reid Wiseman and Mission Specialist Christina Koch leave the Operations and Checkout Building for a trip to Launch Pad 39-B and a planned liftoff on Nasa's Artemis II moon rocket at the Kennedy Space Centre. AP
Astronauts , from left, Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, of Canada, Pilot Victor Glover, Commander Reid Wiseman and Mission Specialist Christina Koch leave the Operations and Checkout Building for a trip to Launch Pad 39-B and a planned liftoff on Nasa's Artemis II moon rocket at the Kennedy Space Centre. AP

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) launched its Artemis II Moon Mission on Thursday (April 2, IST), which marks the biggest space mission in over 50 years and a big day for the space organisation.

All eyes were set on the mission which will be landing its four-crew member near the moon for the first time.

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The liftoff took place from the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida from launch pad 39B. The four astronauts who are on board are Reid Wiseman, Christina Koch and Victor Glover, and Canadian Jeremy Hansen.

As Commander Reid Wiseman made his way toward the launchpad at Kennedy Space Center, he paused. Looking toward his two daughters, he made a small, loving gesture—one that carried the weight of everything he had been through.

Wiseman lost his wife to cancer in 2020. In that fleeting second, before the world turned its gaze skyward, the mission became something deeply personal.

Watch the video here: 

Soon after, the countdown resumed its rhythm.

‘We all go for humanity’

Inside mission control, Charlie Blackwell-Thompson — the first woman to to hold the position at Nasa — delivered the final words every astronaut waits for: “You are going for launch.”

Wiseman’s response was calm, almost understated:
“We go for all humanity.”

Crowds gathered in thousands, many having waited hours after delays caused by technical issues, including concerns with the flight termination system and a battery component.

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Before the lift off, there was some issue with the flight termination system and a separate battery system which delayed the launch but soon after the launch, the Space Launch System rose slowly, almost hesitantly, before gathering power twin pillars of flame tearing through the night.

The sound built into a deep, physical thunder, felt even miles away. On the ground, crowds cheered, some with tears in their eyes, others simply staring upward, caught between disbelief and pride.

What remained was the feeling: that this wasn’t just a launch. It was a return, a memory, and a promise all at once.

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