After the crash-landing of Israel’s first lunar mission, Beresheet, which drew crowds and attention around the world of one small country’s daring mission to dream, scientists and engineers are already working on Israel’s next mission to the Moon. 

Lessons learned, new project drafts recently issued at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem in December, and a mission more ambitious than ever before – Israel is willing to put all its cards on the table for its next lunar endeavor scheduled for 2024.

“Israel is going back to the Moon,” Kfir Damari, one of the founders of the Israeli space startup SpaceIL declared standing alongside President Reuven Rivlin, Israel Aerospace Industries CEO Boaz Levy and other leading figures in the Israeli space industry on December 9, 2020 - lending hope to a year filled with havoc and pain amid the coronavirus pandemic. By sheer coincidence, that date was the same as back in 2011 when Damari along with SpaceIL co-founders Yonatan Weintraub and Yariv Bash, spoke of how they first wanted to send a spacecraft to the Moon - something that for Israel seemed as only a pipe dream. 
Read More