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There's some of our favorites. This story was made into a 2014 motion picture, directed by Angelina Jolie based on the 2010 nonfiction book by Laura Hillenbrand, Unbroken, a World War Two story of survival, resilience, and redemption. While some of the most remarkable parts of Zamperini's story were left out of the film, you will be hearing them told now by the man himself. We'd like to thank the folks at Vision Video for giving us access to the footage you're about to hear.
Check out their selection of 1900 video titles of uplifting, family friendly videos at visionvideo.com. Let's take a listen. My name is Louis Zamperini. I was born January 26, 1917 in Olean, New York, and moved to California for my health. I had pneumonia. And so ever since I was two years old, I lived in Torrance, California, just south of LA about 20 miles. And I'm afraid I was in constant conflict with the Torrance police. I was a rascal. And I think it all started with the I couldn't speak English. And the other kids were teasing me.
They wanted to hear me swear in Italian. You know, these were your bullies, they call them today. So my dad got me some weights, a punching bag, and I started getting in shape. And so then after a few months, I started fighting back. And when I started fighting back, they stopped teasing me. But in the meantime, I continued with my errant ways.
And I had been dissipating, I started smoking when I was five. And during that time, it was prohibition. But everybody made beer, wine and other things. And we knew who made it. And when they're at the movies on Saturday night, we would hijack the stuff. And even if they knew we took it, they couldn't turn us into the police.
So they'd go to jail. So that was my life as a teenager, until my brother got me out on the track, what they call an interclass track meet. And the pains of exhaustion, that's the worst. And that was it, no more running. So a week later, we're having our first duel meet with Narbonne, Narbonne High School, and everybody insisted I represent the school in this race. The same 660-yard run, and they finally talked me into it.
The first two runners from Narbonne had finished, and their third man was ahead of me about 50 yards ago. And I wasn't about to pass him, you know, until the students, a thousand students from my high school started screaming, come on, Louie. Well, those were beautiful words to me because I had no idea that anyone at all knew my name.
I hear a thousand students are hollering, come on, Louie. And that tasted pretty good. And I just got up a little adrenaline, I suppose, and I finally nipped this guy at the table about six inches and came in third. So after that, I thought about that recognition. That was important to me, and I think it's important to all athletes.
The thing that inspires you and creates a desire to go ahead and become a champion is recognition. And so that night I had to make a decision, and that was no doubt the first wise decision of my life. I decided to go all out to become a runner. Now, considering my life, you think that was an impossibility. And my family thought it was an impossibility, my brother thought, but I made up my mind and I became a fanatic trainer.
No more dessert. I ran everywhere, no hitchhiking. I'd run like 12 miles on a Saturday. I'd hit the mountains, run around lakes, jump on, and I got to where I liked it. I was not getting tired anymore and fatigued, and I enjoyed mainly not running around the track but running in the wilderness. And jumping over streams, I can remember on a number of occasions chasing deer down a hill just for the fun of it. And so all that running, and in those days there were no stopwatches around, so I had no idea how fast I was running.
Didn't even care. I just started enjoying running, and finally at the end of summer, the first running race was a Far West AU cross country at UCLA, two miles, about 101 runners. When the race was over, I won by a quarter of a mile, or over a quarter, and I couldn't believe it. I said, no, I'm sure I cut a corner.
I wouldn't take credit for winning. And the officials said, no, all the talents are in, you passed every checkpoint. And they said, by the way, you broke all three records, class A, class B, and class C, and you ran the two miles in 957, which was comparable to college running when I was a sophomore in high school.
So that did it. I knew that hard work was the answer, and from then on I never lost a race for three and a half years. The second best 5,000 meter runner in America was coming to California to run, to draw a big crowd and so forth, and my brother said, I want you to train, you've got two weeks, I want you to run against this guy. We had no hopes of the Olympics, just run against him to see how close you can get to a fellow who's going to make the Olympic team, and that would have been a victory in itself.
And I caught him at the table about two inches, so I knew that I could beat him. The second best runner in America, and this gave me the possibility of making the team. Now I didn't think about the team at that time, until the next day when I got a call from the newspaper that the Olympic committee had called Torrance to tell him that I qualified for the Olympic tryouts at Ramblings Island in New York.
And again it wasn't important to win, I made the team. And so I'm on this ship now with all these great athletes, and they were all my heroes, you know, I'm going around meeting all the athletes, and go off the ship in Hamburg and off to Berlin, and then they took us into the most beautiful Olympic village ever made. And it was gorgeous, fenced in, animals running loose, lakes, stormtroopers walking through and we'd give them the Heil Hitler salute with a big laugh on their face. They knew we were kidding, they'd salute back.
If we said Heil Adolf, they'd say Heil Hitler, or vice versa. And so they were a lot of fun. And you're listening to the voice of the one and only Louis Zamperini, raised in Torrance, California, as he said a self-proclaimed rascal in his youth. But hearing those words, come on Louis, get chanted by students, that recognition, well that was all the fuel he needed, it lit a fire in this young man.
And he said, it was the first wise decision in my life to become a runner. When we come back, more of this remarkable life story, Louis Zamperini's story here on Our American Stories. Here at Our American Stories, we bring you inspiring stories of history, sports, business, faith, and love. Stories from a great and beautiful country that need to be told.
But we can't do it without you. Our stories are free to listen to, but they're not free to make. If you love our stories in America like we do, please go to our American stories.com and click the donate button. Give a little, give a lot, help us keep the great American stories coming.
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Download Thumbtack today. And we're back with our American stories. Let's return to Louis Zamperini and where he left off with his arrival to Berlin, Germany to compete as a 19 year old distance runner in the 1936 Summer Olympics, also known as the Nazi Olympics. So I got in the semifinals and fortunately I made the final. And the last lap comes and I'm 50 yards behind the leaders. Something my brother taught me when I was, I used to complain about the third lap of the mile being tired. And he said, well, so are the other runners. They're all human beings.
They're all tired. But think of it this way. You've got a lap to go about one minute.
Isn't one minute of pain worth a lifetime of glory? And I never forgot that. And so I opened up the last lap and I caught the leaders coming down the home stretch. So I did come in with the leaders.
And in doing so, the coach said, you just ran your last quarter in 56 seconds, which was considered impossible for a distance runner. And that evidently caught the attention of Adolf Hitler. He was there every day. And I go back to my box after my shower and an officer comes over and says, Hitler wants to meet you. First he asked for my name.
I said, I didn't want anything. You know, he was shaking hands with the gold medalist. He said, well, he wants to meet you.
So I went over to him and he just reached down, shook my hand and simply said, the boy with, ah, he said, ah, yeah, the boy with the fast finish. And that was it. So I admit the Fuhrer didn't mean anything. But my opinion of him was the same opinion that Marty Glickman had and all the others. He looked like a comedian and the way he acted, stomping his feet, pounding his legs and face or mustache and all that.
So that was my opinion of him. Well, the games are over and we collected souvenirs. All the Olympians did remind them of their Olympic trip.
And now I'm back home entering USC as a freshman. And now 1940, Tokyo Olympics, we're all aiming for that. And suddenly we get the announcement, headlines in the papers, the Olympics are canceled.
Well, it was quite a blow, you know, adults really couldn't understand it. But for a kid who's been aiming for four years for one race and you're going to hit your peak of your life at that particular year, that was hard to take until Pearl Harbor was hit. And of course, we forgot all about being athletes. And like all other Americans, we were one mind of one accord, one purpose. Get in the war quickly, get it over with as soon as possible. However, I did run in Hawaii to keep in shape. And even though General Arnold in charge of the Air Force, through a friend, he was a friend of mine indirectly. But they wouldn't allow me to go back because our bomb group was a special bomb group and experimental. We were the first to use the heaviest bomb of the war for dive bombing. So we had a lot of missions up and down the Marshall and Gilberts bombing Macon and Tarawa and Woji and all those islands in and out. We had a few local search missions looking for submarines. And then we came back and after a mission, you get a couple of days off and we're heading for the main gate on the way to Honolulu. And the operations officer comes skidding up in the jeep and says, we just got a report of B-25 has gone down 200 miles north of Palmyra. Now the cloud cover broke his house at a thousand feet.
That's our first mission height. And swinging down here and there looking for debris in the water, life rafts, anything we could find. And suddenly the RPMs dropped on one motor, oil pressure to zero, and the pilot immediately called the new engineer and he was so excited to do his job, he came up and nervously feathered the wrong motor. Now this plane could not fly normally on four motors. He couldn't get off the ground with a bomb load.
The Green Hornet was a lemon. And with one motor out, the plane was having trouble. And now when he feathered the wrong motor, the plane just heeled over and went down left wing first 45 degrees at the water and exploded.
The pilot and tail gunner were fortunately blown free of the wreckage. And then as the tail snapped off, the control wires, which are heavy wires that are springing. So when the wires break, they coil up.
So when they snap, the wires coil around the tripod. I'm in the middle, I can't get loose. Now with the wires there, it's a hopeless situation. And so I just thought, well, this is it.
This is it. I'm dead. And so I started sinking. My ears popped.
And that usually happens around 25, 30 feet. And then as I sank deeper, something I never had happened before, I felt like someone was being the scientist with a sledgehammer. And then I lost consciousness. And of course, I'm sinking.
I'm still thinking, so the pressure has got to be getting greater. And then I lost consciousness. And then for some unknown reason, I'm conscious again. I'm freed. I'm loosened from that section of the ship. I'm fairly around my arms trying to find something to grab onto. And fortunately, my USC ring, which was on this finger, was bearing the White Star, still there, snagged onto the waste window.
And I knew that was the waste window by the feel. I grabbed it with my other hand, watched my back out of the window, inflated my life jacket, and popped to the surface. And there, I saw my two buddies who were now hanging onto a gas tank. They were both in a state of shock, screaming help. And the pilot's head was bleeding profusely with a cut artery.
And there's no way I can help them. If I swim over to help them, we're all dead. But I saw a life raft that had ejected from the plane automatically. And so there's a 100-foot chord dragging behind the life raft. So I'm trying to swim through the life raft with shoes on, clothes, and it's impossible. Even in a swimsuit, I couldn't have caught that life raft.
The currents were that vicious. But as I almost gave up swimming, this chord was going by my face. Couldn't see it in the water. And I grabbed the last two or three feet, and I reeled in the raft and got to the pilot and co-pilot, fell on the board, took two t-shirts, made a wet compress, put on the cuts, tied it with the other t-shirt, very tightly so it wouldn't bleed anymore, and laid him back. And then I started thinking about that escape.
That really bugged me. And I kept thinking of any kind of a logical answer for my escape, and I just couldn't find one. So I gave up thinking about it. Instead, I started praying and thanking God for sparing my life. Well, my buddies saw this guy.
They started to pray with me. And then it wasn't long after that, the tail gunner panicked and began to scream. I suddenly dawned on him what happened. We're all going to die, he said. I said, Mac, nobody's going to die.
We're going to die, old guy. I said, Mac, nobody's going to die. And then I told him to shut up.
I said, if you don't shut up, I'm going to make a report on you to the military when we get back. And he still kept screaming, so I tried to use child psychology on him, and that didn't work. So I thought I'd give him a double shock, and this is the last resort of good shock treatment, so I turned my back on and I came around with the back of my hand and cracked him hard across the face. He laid back in the raft, content. And he was okay for maybe five days or a week, and then I had to do it again.
But it always seemed to work, and he never griped him. I just laid back and seemed to enjoy it. So our menu, of course, now is for the next 47 days, there's what birds, fish, and water we could catch, and of course the birds and the fish we simply ate raw. Three albatross. Well, we actually caught four of them. We caught the first one we caught, we just ripped it open and the smell was enough, we threw it overboard. The second one we caught, I said we've got to eat some part of it, you know. And so we took the breast, we tried to take a bite out of the breast a piece and tried to chew it up and swallow it. We just barely swallowed one mouthful, and again we threw it overboard and used parts of it through bait. And we did catch a small fish. We divided that in three ways, and that wasn't bad, raw fish. And then a lot of time went by before we got another albatross, another, oh yeah, there's another albatross. We opened it up and now it was like a hot fudge sundae with nut on it.
We ate everything, eyeballs. And what a story you're hearing Louis Zamperini tell. Hitler wants to meet you, he was told after that last, final burst of speed. And by the way, he did not tell the story here of him seizing the Nazi flag and stealing it and taking it home. That's a heck of a story, we couldn't tell every bit and part of this story. But he did it, and he did it because, well, why not? He was still, well, a rascal in the end. He goes to USC, he wants to compete in the 1940 Olympics.
That doesn't happen, they're cancelled. Then comes Pearl Harbor. His life has changed. He takes on dangerous missions and soon finds himself stranded in the Pacific with a few buddies, 47 days hanging on for dear life to be rescued. When we come back, more of this remarkable life story, the voice of Louis Zamperini from the grave.
He's in heaven now, he's smiling, loving this story, here on Our American Stories. There's nothing like sinking into luxury. Anibé sofas combine ultimate comfort and design at an affordable price. Anibé has designed the only fully machine washable sofa from top to bottom.
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Shop now at washablesofas.com. Add a little to your life. Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply.
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Find your CFP professional at Let's Make a Plan dot org. And we return to our American stories and to Louis Zamperini's story. The year is 1941, while serving as a bombardier on a search and rescue mission in a B-24 Liberator in the Pacific, Zamperini's plane experienced mechanical difficulties and crashed into the ocean.
Let's pick up where we last left off. Before we went seven days without water, on the 27th day we heard motors and you can imagine our excitement. We shot flares through water dying in the ocean, flickered our mirrors, the plane came down and flew low as they came towards us. We had our shirts off, you know, waving our shirts, tears in our eyes, boy we're gonna be with the Marines tonight on Palmyra. And then machine gunning, water splashed off, you know, coming at us and just missed us.
And then I saw the red circle and I knew it was a Sally bomber which was comparable to our B-25. And so that went on, they stretched us for about 30 minutes. I was in the water with two sharks while the other two stayed in the raft and every time I came up I knew they were dead. But they were alive and they weren't touched, missed by an eighth of an inch, quarter inch, half inch.
And this was just unbelievable. And I'm in the water with two sharks and of course I'm taught how to evade sharks. The last resort is straight on me, just stay there, they'll come up slowly, they'll stop, size you up and then they'll come at you.
And you've got plenty of time to get your hand up there and catch them on the end of the nose and they usually just take off. And that worked. But after about 30 minutes we decided we were in a hopeless situation, the raft was now wrinkled, laying flat in the water.
There's no chance, we've got to pretend we're dead. So we pretend we were dead and the plane evidently bypasses that round but made a big circle. And we thought they were going back to base but they decided on one more run. And this time as they came directly on course this time instead of off course, I looked out of the corner of my eye and I saw the bomb bay door open and I thought, oh no, this is it. They dropped the depth charge. It was a canister. Now we dropped bombs on submarines, they dropped a canister and it lit about 50 feet away which would have killed us.
But the canister was improperly armed and sank to the bottom harmlessly. They did turn around then and leave us and boy what a relief. And then we had to start pumping that raft. With shocks around, we're right level with the water, we're pumping like mad, taking turns and barely got the raft up again.
And now the holes are about the size of a 22 hole, that's a 7.7 millimeter I think. And if you saw the inner tube pull a hole through the swimming pool, it would not sink. That was our situation. And then as we settled back in the raft after eight days, which it took us about eight days to get the raft decently patched up. And then the only real big storm we had during the entire time and it was monsters. The waves were like 25 to 40 feet and that was far more frightening than the Japanese airplane and far more frightening than the sharks. And we survived that, well I should say the two of us survived that.
The tail gunner died on the 33rd day and we buried him at sea. And so the next day of course there were big swells and we're on top of the swell and I see land for the first time. And we knew we were going to drift into the islands but we also knew these were held by the Japanese. So we had to be real careful and try to find a Gezurig island. And we were about to land on one island when the Japanese patrol boats came around a point and spotted us.
And you know you got about 25 guys with rifles aimed at you, one guy with a machine gun. And we were so bushed that we couldn't really laugh but inside we were laughing. Then they threw us a rope and pulled us aboard, we couldn't even crawl, we were that weak. And sat us on the deck of the ship and hit us with a pistol in the face. But they did give us a drink of water and a biscuit. And we were back in Nuwoji and there weighed in at 30 kilo, about 65 pounds.
So I lost about almost 100. And there we were treated decently. They pulled the raft out from the boat and counted the holes, 48 holes. And I told them, I told them the day. The 27th day on the raft, the date that the Japanese pilot strafed us. You should be able to find out who that pilot was. Oh no, the Japanese pilot wouldn't do that. And they did it. So they wouldn't accept that.
Even with the evidence. Two days later we're told we're going aboard a steamer heading for another island. And after you leave this island we cannot guarantee your life.
So we're heading for a kwaj. And we knew through the scuttlebutt that it was considered execution island. We were blindfolded. In the ocean, 47 days out there, all you saw was that endless sky.
And the Pacific Ocean is what, 65 million square miles of endless ocean. Now I'm blindfolded. And when I'm inside that cell, which is 2 feet wide by 6 feet deep and 6 feet long.
They take my blindfold off. My eyes just jump all over the place. I couldn't believe where I was. And this had a terrible effect on me. I just, in the corner of that cell I just sat there and I looked at my skeletal frame and just started to cry.
Two months ago I was a vigorous athlete and here I am a skeleton. And then our new guard came on duty after about a week. And he simply looked in and said, you Christian, me Christian. That's all he could say. Well in Japan at that time you didn't admit you were a Christian.
Not in Japan. And of course I thought I wasn't. Oh me, Christian, Christian. So we started to chat on paper. We'd draw a picture for the name to it and so forth. And two days later he got his monthly candy ration and shared it with me.
Unbelievable. Every day of course in the morning we would think about execution. Will this be the morning? Will this be the morning? And then an officer came in one day and said, you will go to the Oklahoma prisoners of war with the Japanese fleet.
Up to a sacred camp in the hills of Ofuna. And there I shoved him into a room and told him to stand away for further orders. And so I stand there and I see the back of the man's head and then he turns around, leans back in the chair and looks at him and laughs. And he didn't have to say, remember me? I knew him well at USC for three and a half years, James Sasaki.
And if I only said I came back to Japan after USC and became Admiral Sasaki, the civilian rank of Admiral, head of all interrogation all over Japan, 91 prison camps. And we talked about USC, the bacon and egg doctors on the campus. He was talking about that kind of food so they weren't getting it. And then he said, well we'll see each other from time to time. They called him Jimmy. Jimmy Sasaki had a high frequency transmitter just off of Torrance Boulevard, a short distance from the Edison substation, where he made broadcasts daily to the Japanese government. Then it said he left by boat two days before or raid by the FBI and CIA.
And finally transferred to what they called headquarters camp Omori between Yokohama, Tokyo on a man-made island. And there I meet the nightmare of my life, the bird. I come in there, he lines us up, comes by and looks at me and I couldn't look in his eyes.
I looked away and he said, why you don't look in my eyes? Bang! So I'm knocked down.
I get up, knocked down again. So I'm punched out every day for the first ten days and I knew who the boss was, that's for sure. And so he was so brutal, the other guards, we gave him vile, filthy names. We didn't give him a filthy name, we simply called him the bird.
Because if he did find out through scuttlebutt that we named him a certain name, then we're really in for trouble. And you've been listening to Louis Zamperini tell the story of his capture by the Japanese. Forty-seven days in the ocean, the sharks were tough, the gunfire from enemy Japanese planes was tough, but what was tougher is surviving a wicked storm with thirty-five foot plus waves. He's transferred to Execution Island, he catches a glimpse of himself and all he saw was a skeleton frame and he just started crying. Every morning he thought about one thing, his execution. And then he's transferred to another camp where he meets his tormentor, the bird.
When we come back, more of this remarkable life story, Louis Zamperini's story here on Our American Stories. Enjoy a no-risk experience with pet-friendly, stain-resistant and changeable slipcovers made with performance fabric. Experience cloud-like comfort with high-resilience foam that's hypoallergenic and never needs fluffing.
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Find your CFP professional at letsmakeaplan.org. And we return to our American stories and to Louis Zamperini's story. When we last left off in his story, he described a Japanese internment prison guard known as the Bird. The Bird was so deranged that General Douglas MacArthur named him as one of the most wanted war criminals in Japan. Let's continue with Louis Zamperini.
Now he was a son of a wealthy family. He plunked out officers' schools. They had him for officers. And I can remember when we had a B-29 raid, he called all the Americans out. And he separated the officers from the enlisted men.
And then he had all the lowest rank enlisted men just to shame us, buck drive us, face us. And each one had to punch us and knock us down. And they wouldn't hit us hard. They'd hit us easy and then they'd get hit with a club. Hey, hit us hard, knock us down, get it over with. So we had to take a full blow in the face, down on the ground. And so that's the way he was.
He took it out on officers always. Officers got the punishment. But about another week went by, and I believe there were six or seven of us lined up, put on a train. And now we're crossing Tokyo. But see, in the meantime, they had the big fire rate on Tokyo, which we saw from our vantage point. We saw the sky aglow all night and half the next day.
And we're put on the train and we go right to that charred waste. And all we could see for miles, 19 square miles of charred, you know, bamboo hutch or whatever, wooden shacks. But the only thing we were able to identify were the hundreds of layers that the Japanese did.
They did like the Germans. Their factory was bombed, but it didn't slow them down because the big factory, the industrial complex at the point of Tokyo, they only had part of their machinery there. The rest of it was in the civilian homes. And I remember going to the slaughterhouse to pick up our meat, which was horse guts, in a wheelbarrow. And I used to see these transformers, and I thought, my golly, for this little house, I'd look back and I'd see a lathe, great big 25,000-dollar lathe, and the guys working, making parts. And all down the street. So it was really strange to see the only thing not burnt were all those machines.
And that was the reason Truman had the firebomb in Tokyo was because that was the industrial complex. So now we're going north 12 hours to Waiju, Nagano, and down to the ocean to Nowatsu. And we get to the prison compound. We have to stand there to test them and wait for further order. And we waited and watched the front door of the guard shack. And whoever was in there was making us wait purposely. And we waited and waited and waited, and the door opened and out steps the bird. Well, my knees buckled.
I just couldn't believe it. I just thought, you know, I'm a guy that never gives up. But I got to the point where I just thought, it's hopeless, hopeless. I can't escape this guy.
So I got back to attention, and then I had to put up with him all over again. So then about eight days before the war was over, one of the guards came to me and said, a sad thing happened in Japan, a city called Hiroshima, cholera broke out. No one's allowed to go in.
It's quarantine. And we thought that was sad. So the whole nation of Japan knew that Hiroshima was a city quarantined with cholera.
And then about eight days later, we're told to paint PW on the roof. We'd heard rumors about the war being over for two years. It didn't mean much, but we wouldn't believe it until we saw a TVF fly over the river, and they saw all the prisoners in the river, and they flashed on their red light, da da da, and the radio man picked it up, the war's over.
So then we rushed up to the compound and began to wave at the plane, he circled and circled. Then they dropped the red ribbon. On the end of it was a candy bar with a bite out of it, and a pack of cigarettes with two cigarettes gone. And yet 350 men got a puff of cigarette, and we all got a sliver of candy.
Pretty good. That evening he came back, and we looked like a body falling. It was a pair of Navy pants tied at the bottom and top, and cartons of cigarettes and candy. And Commander Fitzgerald of the Grenadier Submarine, the ranking officer, he opens the pants, and right on the top was a magazine. And he just stood there silently looking at that picture of the atomic bomb, because we'd never heard of it. And he kept looking at it, and the other officers walked up, and we all looked over his shoulder and looked at that picture.
And then I realized the date of the cholera at Hiroshima, that the same dates were actually what happened with the bomb, and the Japanese pulled their eyes over the general public by telling them it was cholera, which was the best thing they could have done. So finally, the bird, two days before we actually knew the war was over, the bird disappeared, because we had a 70-pound rock on the second floor right over the river, and a rope. We had it hidden away in the bulk of the building, and we were going to grab him, tie the rock on him, and throw him over into the river. That was our intention.
But he flew the coupe, so we didn't see him again. And the other guards all started bowing and scraping, and we felt sorry for them, and we knew that families at home, they weren't eating too well. And typical American, we started giving the guards food to take home to their children and stuff like that, candy. In fact, when the war was over, sleeping in tents on the way home, I still had nightmares about the bird.
I'm Italian, I have to have revenge, and when he's torturing me and punishing me, I'm giving revenge on my heart. And my hands are clenched, I got him by the throat, and that was in my dreams every night, every night, every night. I got home, it was the same thing at home. I got married, I still had the nightmares. In the meantime, I started drinking because of that. But before I started drinking heavily, I started training for the 48 Olympics.
And I did get in good shape, and then when I had my knee give out and my ankle and muscle spasm or like an explosion in my calf, I couldn't train anymore, and I gave that up, and that really hurt me. So I started drinking more and more, and my wife decided it's time for a divorce. And somebody in our apartment house was telling me about a fellow named Billy Graham, we never heard of him. They talked my wife into going down to hear Billy Graham. He made a decision for the Lord, came home that night, tried to talk me into it, and I said, keep away from him, I don't want to hear anymore about religion. But she said something that really struck me in the heart, and that was, and because of my decision, I'm not going to get a divorce. So that was good news. But the next day she was all over me, and I refused to go.
Finally, they more or less tricked me into going down to hear Billy. And there he's preaching, you know, for all of sin. Well, I knew I was a sinner. I didn't like the idea of him reminding me, it just gave me an excuse to leave. I got mad, grabbed my wife, pulled her home, and the next day she's all over me again. So I finally consented on a return trip, and I said, well, when he finishes his sermon, I said, everyhow, head bowed, I'm getting out.
Okay. So back we went, and I kept quoting scripture from the Bible, and I knew what I should do, but I didn't want to do it. And then as I started to leave the tent, I started thinking back on the raft. When our lives were spared, we did pray morning, noon, and night, and we prayed constantly on the raft. My prayer was always, God, save my life, and I'll seek you and serve you.
And here I am, home, alive. My prayers were answered, and they completely turned my back on those promises. That hit me pretty hard before I got to the aisle where I decided to turn out, no. I stopped momentarily, made my decision, went back to the prayer room, and made my confessional faith in Christ, and there a miracle took place. My life completely changed. I had a turnabout. I knew that I was through getting drunk.
I knew it obviously to myself. I knew I'd forgiven all my guards. I knew I'd forgiven the bird. And I think proof of that was that that night I didn't have a nightmare for the first time. And it's been two and a half years, and since the war, I had a nightmare every night.
And now from 1949 until this day, I still never had a nightmare or even the slightest inkling of a nightmare. And so when I met with the studio to make the movie with Universal, the producer was hearing all the things the bird did to me. And I'm sitting at this meeting like this, listening to these fellows talk, and finally he's getting really uptight, and he jumped up, and he said, Louie, Louie, how could you forgive that so and so? And I stood up, and I said, well, I can only give you one verse from the Bible why I could forgive him. Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new person.
All things are passed away. Behold, all things are become new. And he looked at me, and I didn't know what he was going to do. And he rushed over and grabbed me around the waist, picked me up, and said, we're going to make this into a major film.
So I thought that was pretty neat, him being Jewish and not mentioned in Christ. So that was the climax. That was just beautiful.
So that's my story. And what a voice you just heard. That is Louie Zamperini from the grave in heaven, sharing his story for all to hear about how Jesus saved his life, made those nightmares disappear, and renewed his life and his marriage. And a special thanks to Greg Hengler, as always, for the editing on that piece, and thanks to Vision Video. They have 1,900 video titles of uplifting, family-friendly content.
Go to visionvideo.com. God saved my life, and I will seek and serve you. He prayed on that boat. I turned my back on God, on my promises. But then I came to Christ. My life completely changed. I forgave the bird. My nightmares ended. A beautiful story.
Louie Zamperini is here on Our American Stories. Plus, changeable fabric covers let you refresh your sofa whenever you want. Need flexibility? Our modular design lets you rearrange your sofa anytime to fit your space, whether it's a growing family room or a cozy apartment. Plus, they're earth-friendly and trusted by over 200,000 happy customers. Starting at just $699, it's time to upgrade to a stress-free, mess-proof sofa. Visit washablesophas.com today and save.
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Copyright 2025. JPMorgan Chase & Co. Asking the right questions can greatly impact your future, especially when it comes to your finances. So if you're looking for a financial advisor you can trust, certified financial planner professionals are committed to acting in your best interest. That's why it's gotta be a CFP.
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