In this episode of The Jewish futurism Lab, I sit down with Mexican artist and papaya visionary Alejandro Glatt, the first Mexican artist to send a papaya to the Moon as part of the Lunaprise art museum project connected to NASA’s Artemis missions. Recorded on the day of the Artemis II launch, our conversation weaves together Jewish futurism, space exploration, and the surprising holiness of fruit in my own evolving sense of contemporary Jewish life.
Alejandro and I first met at the Jerusalem Biennale, and in this interview I explore how his “Papayas to the Moon” work merges art, ritual, and space technology, turning a simple papaya into a cosmic symbol of life, diaspora, and connection. I ask him about his “Feel the Fruit” experiences, his role as a community builder and trip leader to Israel, and how he imagines Jewish civilization carrying its stories, symbols, and sacred objects into orbit and beyond.
As you listen, you’ll hear me probing how Alejandro’s art on the Artemis missions reshapes my own questions about Jewish presence in space, how beauty and tiferet might travel with us off‑planet, and why sending a papaya to the Moon could be a kind of blueprint for future Jewish creativity among the stars. You can explore more of Alejandro’s work at alejandroglatt.com and see how his papayas are expanding the conversation about Judaism, ecology, and interstellar imagination.

