Лáйка (Laika), 3 November 1957
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Лáйка (Laika), 3 November 1957
im sorry laika
stills from my laika comic last term 🌠
My very first linocut, a tribute to Laika. Hoping to do more of these in my free time as I learn the medium.
Do you ever think that maybe aliens found Laika, adrift in her pod? You ever think about how they might have tried to save her, but she was already long dead?
You think they saw her innocent little body - slow roasted alive and suffocated - and shed an interstellar tear?
Do you think they looked at that sweet little dog, and then back to each other, and decided that any species that could do this to one of their own, wasn't a species worth contacting?
I hope so.
"laika"
yt shorts had me crying over laika at 2am, so i decided to doodle her
•
This year marks 68 years since Laika was launched into space.
It is important that everyone remembers this story. Not out of nostalgia or scientific curiosity — but out of a deep sense of guilt and reverence.
Because Laika was not just an experiment. She was life. She was presence. She was innocence given over to the unknown.
Her real name was Kudrjavka, which means “curly” in Russian. But she became known as Laika, “the barker,” or “Little Barker.”
She was a mongrel, half Husky, half Terrier, captured on the cold streets of Moscow.
She was only three years old and was chosen because she was calm, docile and had survived the rigors of life on the streets — as if that made her more suitable to die alone in space.
On 3 November 1957 at 2 a.m., Laika was launched aboard Sputnik 2.
The satellite was equipped with food, water, a cooling system, and padded walls. But there was no plan to return.
From the beginning, that trip was a death sentence disguised as scientific advancement.
It is said that she survived for seven hours, but other sources say up to four days. Alone. In silence. Without understanding why she was taken. Just floating inside a metal capsule, while the Earth spun below her — ever further away.
She circled the planet 2,570 times. Then, on 14 April 1958, the capsule reentered the atmosphere and disintegrated. Carried away by the heat. By gravity. By oblivion.
Laika did not ask to be our heroine.
She did not choose to represent science, the space race or human progress.
She was just a stray dog, with eyes that sought affection — and a body that was used as a tool.
And that, brother, is why I return to this story every year. Because it forces us to remember that not all progress is innocent and that many of our achievements were written with the pain of those who could not say “no.”
Laika, we have not forgotten you. And as long as there is someone who tells your story truthfully, your memory will live on not as an experiment but as a testimony of what we must never repeat. 😓
The True Story of LAIKA, the ASTRONAUT DOG 🐶 🚀
29 June 2020
Do you know the story of Laika, the PUPPY that TRAVELED into SPACE? She was the first living being to orbit the planet earth.
In this AnimalWised video, we tell you the story of the first cosmonaut dog and reveal the sad reality behind the official story we were first told.
EVEN A PARACHUTE, WOULD'VE SHOWED THAT THEY CARED. ˚₊‧꒰ა ☆ ໒꒱ ‧₊˚