Claudie Haigneré was the first European woman sent to space in 1996. She had always dreamed of becoming an astronaut despite facing discrimination as a woman. Through hard work and determination, she graduated from medical school at age 25 and joined the international space mission Sojuz TM-24. During her time on the Russian space station Mir, she met her future husband Jean-Pierre Haigneré. After returning from space, she later became France's Minister of Research from 2002 to 2004. Now she advocates for women's rights and access to education.
Claudie Haigneré was the first European woman sent to space in 1996. She had always dreamed of becoming an astronaut despite facing discrimination as a woman. Through hard work and determination, she graduated from medical school at age 25 and joined the international space mission Sojuz TM-24. During her time on the Russian space station Mir, she met her future husband Jean-Pierre Haigneré. After returning from space, she later became France's Minister of Research from 2002 to 2004. Now she advocates for women's rights and access to education.
Claudie Haigneré was the first European woman sent to space in 1996. She had always dreamed of becoming an astronaut despite facing discrimination as a woman. Through hard work and determination, she graduated from medical school at age 25 and joined the international space mission Sojuz TM-24. During her time on the Russian space station Mir, she met her future husband Jean-Pierre Haigneré. After returning from space, she later became France's Minister of Research from 2002 to 2004. Now she advocates for women's rights and access to education.
Claudie Haigneré was the first European woman sent to space in 1996. She had always dreamed of becoming an astronaut despite facing discrimination as a woman. Through hard work and determination, she graduated from medical school at age 25 and joined the international space mission Sojuz TM-24. During her time on the Russian space station Mir, she met her future husband Jean-Pierre Haigneré. After returning from space, she later became France's Minister of Research from 2002 to 2004. Now she advocates for women's rights and access to education.
Claudie Haigneré The first European woman in the space
André-Deshays (better known as Claudie Haigneré) was born 1957
in a small town in France (Le Cruesot). She’s a French politician, but she’s famous because she was the first European woman to be sent in the space, in 1996. She always wanted to become an astronaut, and this dream cost her a lot of hours spent with studying and commitment, also facing the society which didn’t believe in her and discriminated her for being woman. Nobody thought that she could become an astronaut. However, against everything and everybody, she got the graduation in medicine at only 25 years old! She had already showed who she was! After the graduation she joined the international space mission “Sojuz TM-24”, which brought her and other two male astronauts in the space. Her dream came reality, and she was the first European woman to be sent in the space. During the permanence in the space, on board of the Russian space station “Mir”, she met Jean-Pierre Haigneré, who later became her husband. Once returned, in 2002 she became the French minister of research until 2004. Nowadays she’s a fighter for the women’s rights and she’s making a campaign in favour of women, who can’t get access to education, therefore I think she’s a woman who’s making the difference in our world.