Live Long and Prosper (Vulcan salute)

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Celia Lovsky as T'Pau raises her left hand in the first Vulcan salute ever seen, in "Amok Time", from Star Trek: The Original Series, September 15, 1967.
unidentified fans at Starcon '77 in Dallas, Texas

Live Long and Prosper is a now-famous hand gesture performed when two Vulcan characters either greet one another or take their leave. The phrase "Live long and prosper" is accompanied by this formal hand gesture. The (lesser known) response is "Peace and long life."

The single canon reference to this action being called a "salute" is in the episode "Journey to Babel", where Dr. McCoy asks Spock, "How does that Vulcan salute go?" Leonard Nimoy also calls this "the Vulcan hand salute" when he talks about it in interviews and documentaries. Fans generally refer to it this way as well. One very early example is this December 1967 reference: "Many thanks, and a Vulcan salute ... for suggesting [this] carbonzine become a fanzine." [1]

In January 1968, the zine The Crewman's Log #5 had instructions on how to make "the Vulcan Salute" symbol with one's hands; it involved lots of practice and the application of "Scotch Tape" which one left on one's hand all day to "train your fingers."

Vulcan Pronunciation

There are at least three different versions of the Vulcan pronunciation of this phrase in common use:

  • Dif-tor heh smusma is the version seen on most "official" Star Trek sources such as Memory Alpha; it was first used in Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979).[2]
  • Mene sakkhet ur-seveh is often seen in fanfic, but is not canon for the TV show or films; it has a later origin in Diane Duane's novel Spock's World (1989).
  • In the early 1970s, many fans said "Peace and Long Life" as Pastak v'dora lashe. Joan Verba in her book Boldly Writing says these words came from a "joint effort among Michelle Malkin, Joyce Yasner, and Lee Smoire [presumably this was the Lee Smoire who was a long-time member of the Washington Science Fiction Association]."
  • More ways to say Live long and prosper and understand the IDIC at the Vulcan Language Institute

The Hand Gesture in Canon

Back in the 1960s, hippies who watched Amok Time thought the salute was a variation of the two-fingered peace sign. But we Jews knew better. - Rabbi Yonassan Gershom[3]

The Vulcan salute was performed in canon for the first time in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Amok Time." Celia Lovsky as T'Pau is the first person viewers saw raising her left hand in the now-familiar gesture.

Leonard Nimoy writes in "I Am Not Spock" that he based the hand gesture on the "Priestly Blessing" performed by Jewish Kohanim, the priests of the Hebrew Tribes, with both hands. [4][5]It represents the Hebrew letter Shin (ש), which has three upward strokes similar to the position of the thumb and fingers in the salute. The letter Shin stands for Shaddai, meaning "Almighty (God)". The words of the blessing are from Numbers 6:24-26: "May the Lord bless you and keep you," and so on. Nimoy says he was also told that the Shin invokes the Shekinah, the female aspect of God, and it is she who enters the temple and blesses the people, especially on Friday night, as the Sabbath begins.

President Barack Obama and Nichelle Nichols give the Vulcan salute from the Oval Office, February 29, 2012.
Scottish National Party MP Philippa Whitford concludes an address with the Vulcan salute. Whitford spoke in favor of establishing Britain's first spaceport in Scotla..., January 15, 2016

Live Long and Prosper: Valediction Used by Fans

"Live Long and Prosper" (commonly: "L.L.& P.") is used by some Trek fans as a closing to letters and messages to each other. For example: "See you at the next con! L.L.& P., MPH." Leonard Nimoy signed all of his Twitters with LLAP.

On January 15, 2016, Dr. Philippa Whitford, the Scottish National Party's MP, spoke in the House of Commons supporting the establishment of Britain's first spaceport to be in Scotland. She concluded with the salute and the words "Live long and prosper."

Aboard the International Space Station, astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti wears a modified Starfleet uniform and gives the Vulcan Salute Feb. 28, 2015 in honor of Leonard Nimoy, who died Feb. 6 of that year.

On March 26, 2021, "Leonard Nimoy Day" in Boston, the city's Museum of Science announced plans to enshrine the Vulcan salute as a 20-foot stainless steel sculpture by David Phillips, to stand outside the museum. Nimoy was born in the West End, not far from the museum.[6]

The "live long and prosper' symbol represents a message that my dad believed so strongly in. My dad always loved Boston and he would be honored knowing that the Museum of Science would be the permanent home to this memorial. The sculpture not only depicts one of the world’s most recognized and loved gestures for peace, tolerance, and diversity, but it will also be a beautiful tribute to my dad’s life and legacy. - Julie Nimoy

The Hand Gesture in Fanon

The gesture was named the Ta'al by Margaret Wander Bonanno in Dwellers in the Crucible, and many fans have adopted this name. Diane Duane refers to it as "the parted hand".

Jacqueline Lichtenberg incorporates the gesture in the philosophies expressed in her Kraith series. Here, it is an expression of devotion to Surak's Construct. The thumb held apart from the other fingers represents reverence for privacy: the small finger, IDIC; the third finger, Nome, meaning All; the middle finger, reverence for life; and the index finger, the doctrine of the Domination of Logic. [7]

The Hand Gesture Portrayed in Fanworks

External Links

References

  1. ^ from Plak-Tow #1
  2. ^ Vulcan Language on Memory Alpha; the pronunciation was coined by James Doohan (Scotty) as a phrase that could be lip-synced to the spoken words "live long and prosper" in English.
  3. ^ Rabbi Yonassan Gershom, Jewish Themes in Star Trek. Lulu, 2010.
  4. ^ " When I was a boy, there was a particular blessing used in our local shul (synagogue). The four fingers of each hand were split to create the Hebrew letter shin, representing Shad-dai, the name of the Almighty. When we were creating Star Trek, we needed a salute. I thought back to that hand symbol and proposed it. The rest, as they say, is history. Why did I think back to that hand gesture? Actors are always looking for something personal to bring to their professional lives. Maybe, then, it was the convergence of my spiritual and artistic lives. Maybe, in a way, I can call that salute my Vulcan shalom, my greeting of peace, my yearning for the blessing of peace -- the age-old quest of the Jewish people, my people. -- Ad by the American Jewish Committee. New York Times 22 December 1996."
  5. ^ Nimoy also gave a talk in 1976 that talks at great length about this gesture, his experiences with it as a young boy at his synagogue, and how he decided to incorporate it in Vulcan culture. This talk was transcribed in an issue of Leonard Nimoy Compendium and reprinted in The Yomin #5.
  6. ^ "Live long in sculpture: 20-foot art planned for Spock symbol." Associated Press, March 26, 2021
  7. ^ from Surak's Construct