Unbroken: Louis Zamperini’s Story of Survival and Redemption

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On a May afternoon in 1943, an Army Air Forces bomber crashed into
the Pacific Ocean and disappeared, leaving only a spray of debris and a
slick of oil, gasoline and blood.

Then, on the ocean surface, a
face appeared. It was that of a young lieutenant, the plane’s
bombardier, who was struggling to a life raft and pulling himself
aboard.

So began one of the most extraordinary odysseys of World War II.

The
lieutenant’s name was Louis Zamperini and the story of his POW
experience—and conversion to Christ at the 1949 Billy Graham Crusade in
Los Angeles—is told in the No. 1 bestseller, Unbroken.

Written by Laura Hillenbrand, Unbroken has been hailed by TIME magazine as the best nonfiction book of the year.


We
caught up with Mr. Zamperini by phone a few weeks ago to talk about his
June 10 book signing at the Billy Graham Library, and how God is using Unbroken to touch lives around the world.

Zamperini’s
story began in Torrance, Calif. The child of Italian immigrants
often found himself in trouble with the authorities—until a police
officer suggested that the high-spirited boy use his gift of ‘fleeing’
for sport instead of mischief.

By the end of high school, he had
become a world class runner, setting a world high school record in the
mile. He qualified to run on the 1936 Olympic team by tying the world
record holder in the 5,000-meter race.

During the Berlin Olympics,
Zamperini was America’s top finisher in the event, covering the final
lap in an astounding 56 seconds.


Following
the Games, he enrolled and competed for the University of Southern
California on national record-breaking teams. Many said Zamperini
would have broken the four-minute mile had he not retired from the sport
to join the U.S. Air Corps as a bombardier in the South Pacific during
World War II.

On a routine reconnaissance run, his aircraft
crashed into the Pacific Ocean, and Zamperini and another crew member
survived in a life raft for 47 days, drifting 2,000 miles, into Japanese
controlled waters.

His rescuers were also his torturers, as the
Japanese put Zamperini into a series of prison camps. One particular
guard wanted to make an example of the eternally optimistic Olympic
runner, and for two years the guard tried to break Zamperini’s spirit
with verbal and physical cruelty.

But the feisty young man
outlasted the guard, and when the war ended Zamperini returned to
Torrance to a hero’s welcome. He partied with celebrities and married a
debutante, but his life soon spiraled out of control—until that day.


The
year was 1949; the city Los Angeles. Zamperini was adrift and
struggling with alcoholism and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. His wife,
Cynthia, was ready to slap him with divorce papers, but neighbors
convinced the young woman to listen to the bold evangelist preaching in a
big tent outside downtown Los Angeles.

Mrs. Zamperini accepted
Christ that night and told her husband that because of her conversion,
she wouldn’t file for divorce. But, she wanted Louis to accompany her to
the Crusade.

“After a week of arguing, she finally persuaded me
to go,” Zamperini recalls, “but I was resentful. I’d always been
poisoned against such tent meetings since I was a youngster.”

In Unbroken,
Hillenbrand paints a vivid picture of what happened when Zamperini
walked into the Billy Graham Crusade, and even included portions of the
sermon he heard.


The chapter is an answer to prayer, says Zamperini. “Unbroken
is Laura’s book, so all I could do was pray that she would somehow have
the gospel in it. Then she called me and told me she talked to Billy
Graham and got a hold of Cliff Barrows. She wanted to include the sermon
I heard, and they sent it to her.”

Zamperini is thankful for
Hillenbrand’s persistence and thoroughness. He describes her as an
amazing researcher. “She has such depth in her writing and she confirms
every single thing.”

Unbroken is really a history book, says Zamperini. “I get calls from World War II veterans, and they say, ‘I have just finished Unbroken and finally someone has written the truth about the war in the Pacific.’”

While
secular audiences are eating up Hillenbrand’s captivating descriptions
of Zamperini’s track career, World War II experience and the horrifying
prisoner-of-war account, Christians are finding fresh inspiration in
the pages of Unbroken.


“I get so many letters from
Christians,” says Zamperini, “and some of them are having a tough time. I
write them back and share Scriptures with them.”

He describes a
letter he received from a man who was fired from his job: “This guy was a
Christian and forgave everyone else in his life, but he had a hard time
forgiving the boss who fired him. He hated the man. But then he read in
Unbroken how I forgave the POW prison guard.”

The man not only forgave his boss, he is now praying for him.

When Zamperini opened his mailbox a few days before this interview, he found a letter he says he’ll always treasure.


It was from Billy Graham.

“Dear
Louis,” wrote Mr. Graham, “My associate Maury Scobee read me parts of
the new book about you yesterday. What a life you have lived. What a
description you have in the book of your conversion to Christ in 1949. I
had tears in my eyes and praise in my heart for what God has done
through you.”

Unbroken has had a tremendous influence
and it’s turned into a God-given opportunity to share the Gospel,”
Zamperini adds. “The book has yielded an unbelievable ministry.”

Used with permision from the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.


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