PHOENIX -- It was to be a day of glory for seven families the world over. In Israel, a brother had gathered to toast his brave sibling. In Wisconsin, another rose before sunup to see his sister fulfill a lifelong dream. And at a majestic waterfront launch site in Florida, families of divergent backgrounds and cultures had come together to celebrate an event that bridged the differences: welcoming their loved ones home from space.
In one gut-wrenching moment, their common pride became shared grief as they struggled to understand the incomprehensible.
"I have no son," 79-year-old Eliezer Wolferman, the father of Columbia astronaut Ilan Ramon, told reporters in Jerusalem.
Just hours earlier, Wolferman beamed as he gave a live television interview shortly before the shuttle was due to land. He reminisced about the last time he spoke to his son, by video conference from Johnson Space Center in Houston.
"Our family saw him, and the children asked their dad to do somersaults in the air," he said.
Wolferman's son, Israel's first astronaut, was an icon not just to a family but to an entire nation. His father was proud, and it showed.
Then, a news flash. And the interviewer cut him off. Soon, as word spread around the world that Columbia had disintegrated over Texas, Wolferman was back in front of the cameras, struggling with a tragedy he couldn't fathom.
"I think of everything from the day he was born until now," he said. "I have no son. It is very sad, and I don't know what else to say."
Ramon's brother, Gadi, had invited friends to the restaurant he owns to toast the landing.
"Even in our wildest imaginations it didn't occur to us that something could happen," said Gadi, who had been afraid of flying. His brother always assured him driving was far more dangerous.
The astronaut's wife and four children were among the crew families that had gathered at Cape Canaveral for the landing.
After NASA lost contact with the shuttle Saturday, relatives were ushered to crew quarters where NASA officials delivered the somber news and U.S. President George W. Bush called to offer condolences.
Elsewhere across the United States, relatives struggled with shock and misery even as they sought to celebrate the astronauts' lives and the passion that drove them in spite of the dangers.
"It had been an absolutely flawless flight," crew member Laurel Clark's brother, Daniel Salton, said by phone from Milwaukee. He had risen at 5 a.m. to monitor Columbia's return. "To have this happen with 15 minutes to go until it was over was just unbelievable."
Only a day earlier, he had received an e-mail from his sister about how much she was enjoying her first flight aboard the space shuttle.
"I'm just so glad she got to get up to space and got to see it because that had been a dream for a long time," Salton said. "She saw the path to be an astronaut was open -- she went at it full throttle all the way."
For Clark's aunt and uncle, Betty and Doug Haviland of Ames, Iowa, this tragedy brought back memories of another. Their son, Timothy, died in the World Trade Center collapse on Sept. 11, 2001.
"You sort of had the sickening feeling that here we go again," 76-year-old Doug Haviland said.
Betty Haviland said her niece was "very proud to be representing her country."
"She had done something in a world usually reserved for men and she was pleased at the opportunity," she added.
Others voiced their support for the continuation of the space program that had cost them their loved ones. "We want the space mission to go on," Audrey McCool, mother of pilot William C. McCool, said outside her Las Vegas home.
She was preparing to head to Houston on Sunday to join McCool's father. "We don't want those people to have died in vain."
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