WASHINGTON,
August 11 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - The bride, in a
sleeveless white gown, had her feet firmly planted on the ground. The
groom, in a blue flight suit with black bowtie, was almost over the
moon.
When
a judge pronounced them man and wife they blew each other kisses across
the ether, in a ceremony being touted as the first wedding to be
celebrated between Planet Earth and space, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
reported Monday, 11 August.
The
groom, Russian cosmonaut Yury Malenchenko, was aboard the orbiting
International Space Station, hurtling some 400 kilometers (240 miles)
above New Zealand, during the ceremony Sunday afternoon, August 10.
His
bride, 27-year-old Yekaterina Dmitriyeva, was in an auditorium at NASA's
Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas that had been decorated to look
like a wedding chapel.
"My
favorite moment was when the judge read the poem and when I got to read
my poem to Yuri and just feeling the whole moment of it," the
radiant brunette with gold star glitter in her hair told reporters at
her wedding reception at a nearby restaurant.
"It
was so cool. It was just straight to the heart. I almost wept," she
said. "As Yuri is the furthest away, we are the closest because of
the communication that we have," she said.
While
guests enjoyed smoked salmon and borscht, she posed for pictures with a
life-sized cardboard cutout of her new husband.
"It
was a celestial, soulful connection that we have," she added.
Malenchenko
and his best man, U.S. astronaut Edward Lu, participated via video,
appearing on a huge screen in front of the wedding party and some 200
invited guests.
Lu
played a wedding march on a keyboard he brought to the space station as
Dmitriyeva marched down the aisle on the arm of a family friend standing
in for the Russian cosmonaut.
The
two space compatriots had also arranged to have a wedding ring and
tailcoat delivered on a supply vessel to the ISS, where they are on a
six-month tour.
Malenchenko,
41, proposed to Dmitriyeva in December before blasting off for the ISS
in April. The two decided they couldn't wait for his October return to
tie the knot.
Texas
law allows a marriage to be celebrated when one of the parties is absent
for valid reasons - usually because they are in the military or in
prison.
The
couple plans to hold a second, firmly earthbound wedding in a church in
Russia when Malenchenko returns to Earth in October, and then spend
their honeymoon in Australia.