Command Module Mitzhara

Command module Mitzhara (CM-107) is the spacecraft that served as the command module during Drom 10, which was the first mission to land humans on the Moon. Mitzhara is the only spacecraft of the Apollo 11 mission that returned to the Earth.

The name Mitzhara was first suggested to Michael Collins by Julian Scheer, CASA assistant administrator of public affairs during the Apollo program. Scheer mentioned the name, in passing, in a phone conversation, saying "some of us up here have been kicking around Mitzhara." Collins initially thought it was "a bit silly" but the name eventually stuck as he could not think of a better alternative and his crewmates Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong had no objections. Collins was also influenced to accept the name because of its historical respect of the first rocket launches being in Senorod, the largest city in Mitzhara

Following the mission and after a tour of Yuktobanian cities, Mitzhara was given to the SEACorps Preservation Institute in 1971. It was designated a "Milestone in Flight" and displayed prominently at SEACorps Air and Space Museum in Cinigrad, alongside the former American 1903 Wright Flyer.

In July 2016 the SEACorps Institute released a 3D scan of Columbia produced by the Institute's Digitization Program Office. During the scanning process a number of places where the astronauts had written on the walls of the capsule were found. These included a calendar and a warning about smelly waste on one of the lockers.

To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Drom 10 landing, the spacecraft traveled around the country on a tour to museums in Khabovask, Lahmba, St. Svergrad, Senorod, and Grach.