09/05/2026
Shot down. Alone. 31 days eating snails to survive. Then the villagers found him—and risked everything to keep him alive.
June 5, 1943. First Lieutenant Fred Hargesheimer was flying his 49th photo reconnaissance mission over Japanese-occupied New Britain, Papua New Guinea, mapping enemy territory from 20,000 feet. A Japanese Zero appeared from nowhere. Bullets tore into his left engine.
Fred dove sharply to escape. The canopy jammed. Standing to force it open, he was violently sucked out—tumbling through the sky at terminal velocity.
In a moment that defies explanation, the Japanese pilot held his fire. Fred's parachute deployed safely, drifting him down into the endless green hell of the jungle below.
He landed halfway up a mile-high mountain range—75 miles of jungle and 200 miles of ocean from his base. Armed only with a survival kit, Fred started walking toward the coast.
The jungle had other plans.
Venomous snakes. Charging wild boars. Crocodiles that made his raft a deathtrap. Endless monsoon rains. By day 10, exhausted and starving, Fred was eating snails to stay alive. He huddled in a makeshift shelter, murmuring Psalm 23 for comfort: "Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death..."
Thirty-one days. Alone. Waiting to die.
Then voices.
Local hunters had been searching since they saw his plane go down. They found him skeletal, fever-ridden, barely conscious. They carried him to their hidden village of Nantabu and gave him a Pidgin name: "Mastah Preddi."
For seven months, these villagers risked everything. When Japanese patrols came through, they hid Fred, brushing away his boot prints in the dirt.
"Seeing those prints would've meant torture for the whole village till they handed me over," Fred later reflected, still in awe of their courage.
One raid forced him up a eucalyptus tree overnight—mosquito-bitten, shivering with malaria. The village nursed him back from death's door twice.
In early 1944, Australian coastwatchers made contact. On