Nicole Mann says she is proud to be first Native American woman in space
		
		 
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		 [August 27, 2022]  
		By Ashraf Fahim 
		 
		(Reuters) - Nicole Aunapu Mann has waited 
		nine long years for her chance to go into space. 
		 
		And if all goes according to plan, that wait will end on Oct. 03, when 
		she will lead NASA's Crew-5 mission to the International Space Station. 
		 
		"It has been a long journey, but it's been so well worth it," Mann told 
		Reuters on Friday. 
		 
		Mann will be the first Native American woman in space. The first Native 
		American man in space was John Herrington in 2002. 
		 
		"I feel very proud," said Mann. "It's important that we celebrate our 
		diversity and really communicate that specifically to the younger 
		generation." 
		 
		Mann, a member of the Wailacki of the Round Valley Indian Tribes in 
		Northern California, says that her upcoming mission has sparked 
		excitement in her community. 
		  
		
		
		  
		
		 
		"That's really, I think, an audience that we don't get an opportunity to 
		reach out to very often," she said.  
		 
		With her journey into space just weeks away, Mann says she will be 
		taking a few mementos into orbit to remind her of home, among them a 'dreamcatcher,' 
		a traditional Native American protective charm.  
		 
		Mann, a marine colonel with a master's in mechanical engineering, was 
		recruited into NASA in 2013 and finished candidate training two years 
		later. 
		 
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            NASA commercial crew astronaut Nicole 
			Mann poses for a portrait at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, 
			Texas, U.S., July 3, 2019. Picture taken July 3, 2019. REUTERS/Mike 
			Blake 
            
			
			
			  
            The former fighter pilot who flew U.S. combat missions in Iraq and 
			Afghanistan now heads up an international crew that includes fellow 
			NASA astronaut Josh Cassada, Japan's Koichi Wakata and Russian 
			cosmonaut Anna Kikina. 
			 
			They are set to launch from Florida's Kennedy Space Center aboard 
			SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft and swap out Crew-4 from the ISS. 
			 
			The Crew-5 mission will follow the beginning of NASA's landmark 
			Artemis mission, set for its debut launch on Monday. 
			 
			The gigantic Space Launch System, topped by an unmanned Orion Crew 
			Capsule, is the first step in the goal of returning humans to the 
			Moon after a half-century hiatus.  
			 
			Mann said that she and her ISS crew will be helping to prepare for 
			the future success of Artemis.  
			 
			"What we're doing in low earth orbit not only trains the astronauts 
			but provides the technical development and operational concepts that 
			we're going to need to live (with a) sustained human presence on the 
			moon and eventually take us to Mars," she said.  
			 
			"So I just hope that the whole world is watching on Monday."  
			 
			(Reporting by Ashraf Fahim, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien) 
            
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