In perhaps one of the most extraordinary stories of resilience and endurance, Louie “Zamp” Zamperini beat all odds and overcame the fiercest of obstacles. In May of 1943, his story of survival had just began. An Army Air Forces bomber—with Zamperini as bombardier—crashed into the Pacific Ocean, saving only the lives of three men on board, Zamperini being one of those. After forty-seven days stranded in the ocean in a small life-raft, the two surviving men were captured by the Japanese military, sparking a grueling journey as Prisoners of War (POW).
“A lifetime of glory is worth a moment of pain.”
“Louie had met the man who would dedicate himself to shattering him.”
Life as a POW was increasingly onerous for Zamperini. Frequently singled out by a deeply disturbed camp disciplinarian, Louie experienced some of the worst treatment. He was berated, beaten, humiliated, and broken, his humanity stripped from him. Hillenbrand is superb at adapting this continuous nightmare to print. Throughout the latter part of the book, I found myself emotionally hurting as Louie endured each obstacle placed before him.
“He felt words whisper from his swollen lips. It was a promise thrown at heaven, a promise he had not kept, a promise he had allowed himself to forget until just this instant: if you will save me, I will serve you forever.”
He had all of the reasons to live a burdened life following his time in Japan. But it was a promise that Louie had made many years before that pulled him from living a life of turmoil and pain, a life plagued with reliving the trauma that befell him. The promise that, “If God would quench their thirst, he’d dedicate his life to him.” Like Louie, I had forgotten about the promise he made near the beginning of his journey. It was this realization that sent shivers down my spine. In that one moment of divine intervention, Louie’s life would again change forever. The thoughts, dreams, and visions of his crippled past would soon be gone and he would learn to live his life again for a greater purpose.
“When he thought of his history, what resonated with him now was not all that he had suffered but the divine love that he believed had intervened to save him.”
“Unbroken,” now a major motion picture, is now playing in theaters. You can read our film review here.
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