S. T. 2
Energy and Enthusiasm for "Love and Peace"
to the World from OKINAWA

Tadamitsu Saito 12 Hour Outdoor Organ and Synthesizer
Improvisation Concert

 

Held at the Okinawa Peace Memorial Hall on November 22, 1992 and at the Okinawa Memorial Park for 13 consecutive hours from sunrise to sunset on November 23, 1992.

The monument with a sphere on its top symbolizing peace, which stood on the stage of the concert, was decided by the Okinawa Government to be preserved permanently and still remains there as a monument of peace.

The concert was organized by the S.T.2 Executive Committee.

 

Following is the message from Captain Eugine A. Cernan,
Commander, Apollo XVII to the S.T.2 Concert.

 

 

 

Greetings to everyone in Okinawa

It is a privilege to share with you my feelings for gPeaceh, as I saw it, in our universe on my flight to the moon, Apollo XVII.

Looking back at Earth from the moon was truly a memorable moment. Our star was like a jewel surrounded by infinite blackness. As many brilliant jewels are small, so looked the Earth as I stood staring in awe from a quarter million miles away.

Watching everything working together in harmony with such precise timing would be impossible without the help of a Supreme Being--the Creator of the universe. Should I have had the opportunity to stand on the moon beside each human being in the world today, I am sure they would quickly come to the same conclusion.

With a single glance, one can see from pole to pole and across the entirety of continents--from the deep blues of the Pacific, across the continents dominated by the white of snow and the clouds to the turquoise blues of the Caribbean. As Australia, Asia, then all of Europe came into view, you canft tell where one country starts and the other one ends. I saw the world without any borders, without any fighting, without any fearh--a world at peace with itself.

On this 20th Anniversary of Apollo XVII, manfs final footprints on the moon in our century, I send you all my very best wishes for Peace.