Unbroken is the story of the remarkable life of Louis
Zamperini.  It’s an exciting view of one
man’s life in World War II.
For me, it brought up a mystery about the Japanese people.
Louie’s Story:  He started
out as a tough, undisciplined, unmanageable boy in a loving Italian American
family.  The family lived in Torrance , California ,
near Los Angeles 
            Perhaps the
speed young Louie needed to escape the cops was the element that began his
salvation, because he found he could run, fast and hard.  He ran, and he ran, becoming an Olympic
athlete who went to the 1936 Berlin Olympics. 
            Louie was
dreaming of winning a gold medal in the 1940 Olympics, but World War II began,
and there were no 1940 Games.  Louie
joined the U.S. Army Air Corps and became a young officer, a bombardier on a
B-24.
            Flying in
the early part of America ’s
war against Japan 
            The story
of their ordeal in a life raft would be more than most people ever experience
in a lifetime, with no water, no food, sharks following and rubbing up beneath
their raft, blazing sun, cold, and waves, waves and more waves. And finally an
aircraft appears, and there’s hope.  But
no, it’s a Japanese plane which shoots at the sunbaked airmen.  Bullets punch through their raft, but don’t
hit the men.  
            The ordeal
goes on.  You know that Zamperini
survives this so you want this raft ordeal to be over with, because you are
starting to feel like you are in that raft with the three men.
            Finally,
after the raft has drifted over 1000 miles to the west, and just after the
crewman, a sergeant, has died, they find themselves in an atoll, and soon,
captives of the Japanese.  
“The Bird” Watanabe
            Louie and
Phil, his pilot, go from one prison camp to another, with brutal, fiendish
treatment by their Japanese captors.  All
too soon, Matsuhiro Watanabe, nicknamed “The Bird” appears.  Although an enlisted man, he is the master of
torture at the prison camp, and seems to single out Louie the Olympian as his
prime target.  
            Laura Hillenbrand,
whose book,  Seabiscuit, won her
great acclaim, and became a very popular film, has done her research in Unbroken.
 The brutal treatment that the Japanese
inflicted upon thousands of prisoners of war is a well-documented fact, and her
research digs up a tremendous story about this mere Japanese Army corporal who
seems to be the Devil incarnate. 
            The ordeal
of Louie and his fellow prisoners, of torture, starvation, beatings, clubbings,
miserable sanitation, slave labor and incredible humiliation until many are
literally worked to death, goes on and on. 
It finally ends, several days after Japan 
            Watanabe is
the personification of evil, and Hillenbrand tells the story of his escape, his
sentencing to be hanged along with Tojo and the other national leaders, and his
life on the run.  
            Louie finds
his way back to Torrance 
But-- there is what we today call
post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). 
Louie’s life is a nightmare.  Watanabe and his beatings and humiliation
inhabit his mind day and night. There is drinking, and more drinking.  
Louie is the boy saved from a life
of crime by running, who becomes an Air Corps bombardier, then a survivor of an
ordeal on a raft, then survivor of Japanese prison camps, but can he survive
now, as he slides into alcohol?
Yes!  His wife Cynthia drags him to hear an
inspiring young evangelist named Billy Graham, and gradually Louie remembers
the pledge he made to God on that raft, and pulls his life out of the abyss,
and becomes an inspiration for all who get to know him. 
Zamperini goes on to live an
exemplary life, helping others, starting a camp for disadvantaged and at-risk
youth.  In fact, on January 26, 2012
Louie will celebrate his 95th birthday. 
How to reconcile all
this?   
I spent three years living in Japan 
I regularly visited with the Mayor
of the city of Sasebo 
We attended social events with
Japanese people.  We realize it would
take a lifetime to truly understand the Japanese people, because their culture
is so different from ours.   
We worked hard to maintain
excellent relations between our countries, and we were tremendously supported
by the American Ambassador, former Senator Mike Mansfield. His oft-repeated statement
was "The U.S.- Japanese relationship is America 
When I read in Unbroken about
the widespread horrors inflicted upon American and Allied prisoners by the
Japanese it was a shock, even after all these years, since 1945, and then since
I was there in 1983-86.  It was hard to
take.  
Of course, I had heard about all this before, but Hillenbrand’s
description of the horrors was so detailed, so graphic, that it was hard for me
to reconcile.  
The Japanese Army installed a
hateful culture that we saw played out in their invasion of China 
While this brutality was
widespread, there were Japanese people who did not get caught up with it, and
some actually helped the prisoners.
In the end, I believe, the answer we see in Unbroken comes from Zamperini’s
encounter with Billy Graham in 1949, and the very voice of Jesus Christ.  It comes from the absolute forgiveness that
Louie showed his Japanese captors, even Watanabe.
It comes from American forgiveness
of the Japanese, as led by General Douglas MacArthur and President Truman as we
buried our hatchets after World War II.
There will always be evil people,
and Louie saw more than his share of them in Japan Auschwitz  and other
death camps.
And we can point to evil in every
country, in every time, and including America 
However, we can always hope that we
are a part of the good that comes with living honest lives, and forgiving.  
The message of Unbroken, I think, is this forgiveness, and the
redemption it brought to Louie, and to all who truly believe.
Unbroken: a World
War II story of survival, resilience, and redemption 
By Laura Hillenbrand
- Random House (2010) - Hardback - 473 pages - ISBN 1400064163
The Personal Navigator offers
these books and papers:
Frontispiece and Title Page:
Moubray on Breeding, Rearing and Fattening
Moubray:
Practical Treatise on Breeding, Rearing, and Fattening all kinds of Domestic
Poultry, Pheasants, Pigeons, and Rabbits and Instructions for the Private
Brewery. Sixth Edition        . 1830   London , England 
Advice
to a Young Christian on the Importance of Aiming at an Elevated Standard of
Piety, w/ intro by Rev. Dr. Alexander;
third edition, revised and corrected 1830 New
  York , NY 
American
Baptist Magazine and Missionary Intelligencer, May 1820, Vol. 2 No. 9 Boston , MA : Baptist Missionary Society of Massachusetts North Yarmouth . Extract of
letter from Missionary 
 College India Society Islands . Report on efforts
to Christianize American Indians of the Oneida 
American
Baptist Magazine and Missionary Intelligencer, September 1820, Vol. 2 No. 11 Boston , MA : Baptist
Missionary Society of Massachusetts First  Baptist 
Church  in Boston Rangoon  for Calcutta Burma 
American
Baptist Magazine and Missionary Intelligencer, January 1821, Vol. 3 No. 1 Boston , MA : Baptist Missionary Society of Massachusetts Baptist 
Church  and Society in Warren , Maine Mission Rangoon India ; about the Hindoos; ritual of dying and
the Ganges . Mr. Ward and the Mission 
American
Messenger, August 1856; "Behold I bring you good tidings of great joy,
which shall be to all people." Luke 2:10. Vol. 14. No. 8 New York ,
 NY 
American
Messenger, September, 1856; "Behold I bring you good tidings of great joy,
which shall be to all people." Luke 2:10. Vol. 14. No. 9 New York ,
 NY Kennebec  River 
in Maine Calcutta 
Andrew
P. Peabody: Three Sermons preached at the South 
Church , Portsmouth ,
NH  December 25, 1859 and January 15, 1860 by Peabody , Andrew P.,
D.D. 1860 Portsmouth , NH :
James  F.  Shores South  Church 
Annual
Election Sermon, Preached before His Honor Samuel T. Armstrong, Lieutenant
Governor, at the Annual Election, Wednesday, January 6, 1836 by Rev. Andrew Bigelow,  1836 Boston , MA : Commonwealth 
 of Massachusetts Egypt Boston 
Ballou's
Sermons: Select Sermons Delivered on Various Occasions from Important Passages
of Scripture by Hosea Ballou, Pastor of the Second Universalist Society in Boston  1844 Boston , MA 
Beecher,
Henry Ward: Life Thoughts, Gathered from the Extemporaneous Discourses of Henry
Ward Beecher by one of his congregation; fifteenth thousand. 1858 Boston, MA Phillips, Sampson & Co. 299 pp.
12 x 20 cm. Edna Dean Procter collected these notes from two seasons of sermons
by Beecher 
Bible:
Polyglott Bible, English Version, containing the Old and New Testaments with
the marginal readings 1834 Brattleboro 
Boston
Investigator, The; Devoted to the development and promotion of universal mental
liberty. Boston , Massachusetts ,
June 2, 1869 Seaver, Horace, Editor
1869 Boston , MA Spain Lake Michigan  has not risen its banks and inundated the
town. 8 pp. 36 x 42 cm. Newspaper, tiny holes in intersection of folds; letter "c"
pencil on about five articles. Good. (7402) $49.00.  Religious/Atheism
Calendar
Change Threatens Religion by Haynes,
Carlyle B. ca. 1944 Washington ,
 DC 
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