Echoes of the Apollo 8 missionpublished at 20:59 BST
Pallab Ghosh
Science correspondent
Watching the Artemis II crew from launch to splashdown to today's press conference, I keep thinking back to another lunar fly‑round in a very different age.
In 1968, Apollo 8 was officially a test flight, sent to check out navigation and communications ahead of the first Moon landing. For many in my generation, it became something much bigger.
That mission gave us Earthrise: the first colour photograph of our planet, a jewelled blue marble hanging in the blackness above the grey lunar surface.
It helped kick‑start the modern environmental movement and made people feel, perhaps for the first time, that the Earth was fragile and needed friends.
Image source, NASAEarthrise over the lunar landscape
Apollo 8’s crew read from the Book of Genesis on Christmas Eve and closed with a blessing “to all of you on the good Earth”, as one quarter of humanity listened.
They were speaking into a year marked by the Vietnam war and the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy – a world that felt wretched to many adults, even as children like me were simply transfixed by the Moon on television.
Today, the parallels are hard to miss: a planet riven by conflict, environmental crisis and political division. Artemis II is again a loop around the Moon, again at a time when the news is often bleak.
In 1968 it was the astronauts that gave us hope of a better future. Perhaps the words from the next generation of lunar explorers can give us an echo of that hope and inspiration.





