Alibaruho represents Uganda beyond the horizon

Jul 05, 2010

NEIL Armstrong, Michael Collins, Edwin Aldrin junior, do they ring a bell? They were the first humans to walk on the moon, a colossal feat conducted in 1969 by NASA, the US’s national Aeronautical and Space Administration agency.

By Shamilla Kara

NEIL Armstrong, Michael Collins, Edwin Aldrin junior, do they ring a bell? They were the first humans to walk on the moon, a colossal feat conducted in 1969 by NASA, the US’s national Aeronautical and Space Administration agency.

Since then, NASA has conducted over 150 missions with humans on board and approximately 40 unmanned missions and yet, Kwatsi Alibaruho still managed to carve his name in the list of firsts at NASA.

Alibaruho is the first black flight director in mission control at NASA and one of only 58 people whohave directed human spaceflight missions.

Alibaruho was the lead flight director for the shuttle, Discovery, which went on a 13-day mission into space.
The shuttle, was also the first to travel into space after the unfortunate space shuttle, Columbia, broke up after re-entry in 2003, killing all seven astronauts on board.

What a flight director does

“My responsibility is to lead the team of people in mission control to develop, plan and execute space missions for a space shuttle and for the international space station,” he says.

Alibaruho explains that during the mission, he directs the flow of activities in space, the configuration of the spacecraft and the activities of the teams on the ground.

The American-born Alibaruho, whose siblings were born in Uganda, says he is tasked with managing several dozen people of varying expertise. Such include flight controllers and engineers.
He says he also workson highly technical problems associated with planning and executing human space missions.

“I like the fact that this position is a highly technical one,” says the Texas-based avionics graduate who has been a group leader for the International Space Station Life Support Systems Group.
Alibaruho has also been the deputy chairman of the Orbital Space Plane Source Evaluation Board’s operations committee.

Alibaruho on his work

“Working in this profession is a rare opportunity and I want to excel in this area,” says Alibaruho, who is driven by a passion to work with space and related operations.

Alibaruho is the recipient of the 2001 Rotary National Award for Space Achievement Stellar Award and was also awarded with the Engineer of the Year Award in 2001 from the National Technical Association in the US.

Inspiration

Alibaruho says when he first learned about what flight controllers and flight directors did when he was in university at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), he immediately decided he wanted to become a flight director.

“I worked for several years to position myself to be selected as a flight director,” says Kwatsi, who was named after his paternal grandfather, Mukwatsibwoha which in Rukiga is more of a question in the context of a contest.
It is a question posed by an opponent, “who will help me overcome the strength of this opposing person?”

Advice for Ugandans

“The single biggest enabler for my career has been my education,” he says.

“One should pursue the highest quality education available and always think ahead to position oneself for desirable career opportunities,” adds Alibaruho.
Both his parents are both teachers and have since settled back in Uganda.

His father, George Alibaruho, an economics maven, is now a Bank of Uganda professor and chair of the department of economics at Kabale University.
His African-American mother, Gloria Lindsey Alibaruho, is a retired history professor, who is now an entrepreneur in Aloe Vera products in Uganda.

Work ethics

“I tend to be somewhat of a workaholic. Whenever given a task or faced with an assignment, I always work diligently to complete the tasks,” he says.

The flight director adds: “I strive to be excellent in all that I do, so the quality of my work can stand out and subsequently, avail the people on my team the best chance to grow and succeed.”

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
  • While at MIT, Alibaruho did an internship at AT&T, the largest provider of fixed telephony in the US, as a software developer.

  • He has also worked as a software developer at MIT’s laboratory for computer science.

  • He did an internship at NASA in Johnson Space Centre and thereafter, did another internship at Martin Marietta Astrospace Division in New Jersey.

  • On graduation, Alibaruho was hired as a flight controller in the International Space Station Life Support Systems Group of NASA’s Mission Operations Directorate in Texas.

  • After six years, he was selected as the manager of the life support systems team for three-and-a-half years, which, after he was selected as a flight director in February 2005.


  • skara@newvision.co.ug

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