Having spent nine months at the International Space Station (ISS), Indian’s astronaut NASA Sunnit Williams and her Comrade from the crew Booth Wilmore Finally, they will return to Earth on Tuesday at 5:57 EDT (ie Wednesday 03:27 Ist). In June 2024, Sunnit and Butch went to the ISS for a weekly space expedition, which unconsciously stretched to more than nine months after their Boeing Starliner spacecraft collided with technical failures and returned to the ground without them. Now, waiting for the months, not knowing the next course of action, their return was possible by launching Spacex Crew-10, which flew from the Kennedy Space Center on Friday (March 14) on the night for participation in the NASA commercial crew. The crew recently arrived will take over the current astronauts, providing an unobstructed transition before Sunnit and Batch will return home to Earth.

Although a lot is written about the wonderful cosmic journey Sunni Williams, which lasted for many months, here’s a look at its tiny Indian village in Gujarat, India and her ancestors:
Sunnite Williams was born on September 19, 1965 in Euclid, Ohio, in the USA to Dipak Pad and Bonnie Pand. For unfinished her father, the diploma, Panda, was a neurologist from Gujarat, India, and he moved to the United States in 1957, where he met and married Ursulina Bonnie, who was Slovenian American.
Sunni Williams’ roots in India rejoice in the village of Julassan in Gujarat, as it used to be home for her father and grandparents. In a tiny village there are about 7,000 people who are proud of the astronaut to be connected with its village. In fact, there is a small library in the village, called in the memory of her grandparents, as well as in the family house of her father Dipak. According to reports, Sunnit Williams visited her Jhulasan so far- in 1972, 2007 and 2013- after successful execution of space missions. The Cosmonaut of India-Origin also donated funds to school in his village of the Eternal Village during one of her visits, and he still has a picture of her grandparents in his prayer hall.
Julassan’s people, Gujarat, are very proud that Sunni Williams belong to their village. Yes, since the news that in 2024 they broke into the ISS, the residents of Julassan prayed for the safe return of Sunni to the ground, keeping the burning of the oil lamp as a symbol of their hopes, the BBC reports.