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Mercury
Spring 2008 Table of Contents


The summer Milky Way over seaside stones at Lesconil, Brittany,
France.
Courtesy Laurent Laveder.
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by
Mike Simmons
Away
from city lights, beneath a blanket of stars, the child in all of
us comes alive. Something basic, perhaps primitive, beckons our
gaze skyward. After a lifetime spent in the fog of light pollution,
a glimpse of the stars as our ancestors knew them evokes awe at
their beauty and grandeur. It's the same wherever, or whoever,
we are. A fascination with astronomy connects us in a way no other
science can.
Connecting
the World
Astronomers
Without Borders (AWB) draws on this common interest to link astronomy
enthusiasts worldwide. Sharing is an integral part of appreciating
the cosmos. It shows up on a local level when amateur astronomers
take their telescopes to public sites and invite others to explore
the sky with them. AWB extends this concept to people around the
world. After all, we share the same sky.
In
isolated countries, contact with fellow astronomers in the West
is often nothing short of a miracle. When the Amateur Astronomers
Association of Kurdistan (AAAK) in northern Iraq heard that I would
be visiting them to research an article for a US publication, the
bold headline of their newsletter read, "WE ARE NOT ALONE ANYMORE!"
The visit of a lone American astronomer was historic for this active
local group. The amateur astronomer who first befriended the group
also cherishes the relationship that allows him to talk directly
with his new friends in Iraq.
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