Not too long ago, I read an excerpt of Laura Hillenbrand's
Unbroken in a news magazine. The brief passage, describing simultaneous attacks by sharks and Japanese fighter jets on helpless Americans on a raft in the pacific, was compelling enough that I immediately requested the book from the library. (Yes, I'm usually too cheap to buy books. Book gluttons on a budget love the public library!) After I brought the book
home, I opened a recent issue of
Runner's World which I hadn't read yet, and there was another compelling excerpt from
Unbroken, this one an account of a track meet. This broad appeal--a great war story and a great sports story in one book--combined with Hillenbrand's story-telling skill, have kept
Unbroken on the NY Times bestseller list since its publication in November.
Louie Zamperini, a conniving juvenile delinquent in his hometown of Torrance, California, found his gift early: he could run--fast! He became a local hero on his way to setting the high school record for the mile, 4:21.2. The "Torrance Tornado" went on to compete in the 1936 Olympics in the 5000 meters, gaining some international notoriety for his speed. Some speculated that he would be the first the run a mile in under 4 minutes. Alas, before his running career peaked, war broke out. The 1940 Olympics were canceled, and Louie joined the Air Force.
Stationed in the South Pacific, Louie raided Japanese bases and did search and rescue operations. While searching for another plane that had disappeared, Louie's plane's engines failed, landing him in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Most perished in the crash; Louie and 2 others miraculously survived. On two life rafts lashed together, Zamperini and his 2 crew mates survived for weeks on rainwater, birds, and fish, while fighting off constant shark attacks, a typhoon, and strafing from the Japanese airplane. After surviving all of that, one crew mate died, but Louie and his friend Phil continued to drift for weeks, until they finally spotted land. Unfortunately, a Japanese navy ship spotted them before they could paddle to shore.
The "rescued" airmen soon found themselves longing for their little raft in the sea. The hardships and deprivation they suffered at sea paled in comparison to the abuse and degradation imposed by the Japanese. The dehumanizing treatment of the Allied prisoners in the Japanese POW camps almost make the Nazi's methodical, systematic murder of Jews seem compassionate by comparison. I know that soldiers going to war may view the enemy as less than human; this makes it easier to kill them. Of course, that an enemy soldier is less human is a lie, but the Japanese in the POW camps held such a view of the Americans and other Allied troops, and gave them good reason to hate the Japanese.
And hate them Louie did. Hillenbrand goes into great detail describing the many trials of the POW camp, especially the cruelty of a guard nicknamed "The Bird." In a way, Louie was lucky. His fame as an athlete marked him as a keeper. Otherwise, he might not have been kept alive. The Japanese singled him out in hopes that he would be a propaganda tool. They also had him run races for their entertainment.
|
A couple of heroes, Graham and Zamperini. |
After his weeks of deprivation on the raft, and years of deprivation in the POW camp, Louie was not in the shape he had been at the start of the war. When the war ended, he tried to resume his running career. His workouts were promising, but an injury ended it for good. He descended into depression and alcoholism, giving up hope. Before he could totally hit the bottom, his wife dragged him against his will to a tent in LA where an unknown preacher named Billy Graham was holding meetings. Louie remembered a promise he had made to God while on that raft, that if God got him home, Louie would give his life to serving him. Radically saved and with a new purpose in life, Louie turned his life over to Jesus and began a career as a traveling evangelist.
Before he was saved, his driving purpose in life had become revenge on The Bird. He was determined to hunt him down and kill him. Jesus transformed his heart, giving him a spirit of forgiveness. In what must have been a moving event for all involved, Louie traveled to Japan and preached in a prison holding Japanese war criminals, including some who had been guards at camps where Louie was held. He never could have imagined offering forgiveness to these men and preaching the gospel to them during his time as a prisoner, but the transforming power of Jesus' grace made it possible. (The Bird wasn't there. He died before Louie was able to meet him again.)
Hillenbrand did not set out to write an evangelistic book or a spiritual biography, but I wish she would have focused more on Zamperini's miraculous conversion and the theme of forgiveness that came to define his post-war life. I would be interested to know how many people's lives were changed as a result of his testimony: his miraculous, against-all-odds survival at sea, his determination to survive the POW camp, his despair to go on living, then his transformation from a vengeful, hateful survivor to one ready to forgive his tormentors. God's hand can be seen at so many steps in Zamperini's life, protecting him, guiding him, and preparing him.
I can't recommend this book highly enough. It's a great story, about a great man, told by a great storyteller, with a great (though understated in this telling) message of transformation through Christ. As you might expect, a Hollywood treatment is in the works. (Hillenbrand also wrote the book on which the movie
Seabiscuit was based.) I'm sure this will be a great movie, but, in the first place, Zamperini's story is
much too big for a movie. Secondly, I fear Hollywood will miss the biggest story here, God's changing his heart from revenge to forgiveness.