An Unlikely Savior – One Veteran’s Story of Survival

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Seventy five years ago on January 10, 1945 WWII 8th AF Veteran & Long Time Volunteer Sam Najarian’s plane was shot down.

Sam Najarian-minSam Najarian was born in Brooklyn, New York & volunteered for the Army Air Corps cadet program while still in high school in 1943. He was deferred until graduation & left for training a few weeks later. He reported to Fort Dix, N.J., & was sent to Miami for basic training. He was eighteen years old. Sam trained as a B-17 navigator & was assigned in 1944 to the 364th BS 305th BG at Chelveston Azrfield, England.

His first mission was to strike an oil refinery in Germany. “That was tough, tough,” said Najarian, “but I didn’t know it then.” The missions got harder, rather than easier, as he accumulated them, he said.

On his thirteenth mission on January 10, 1945, Sam’s crew flew to Gymnich near Cologne. Sam’s plane suffered an engine loss on the way to & from the target. With only two engines, heavy flak damage & a wing on fire, the pilot gave the bail out order. Sam was an avid newspaper reader. That morning he read about the Battle of the Bulge raging on below. He convinced the pilot to rescind the order, believing they could fly the plane over Allied occupied territory making bailing out a less dangerous action. He navigated the plane west & hoped they had travelled far enough to reach friendly territory before notifying the pilot. As Sam put it, there is no line on the ground telling you where the enemy is. As the pilot rang the bail out bell, Sam & the bombardier prepared to bail out of the nose hatch. But there was a problem. Sam enjoyed coffee. The coffee & the cold made him need to “pass water” frequently. He kept a large can next to him & used it when needed. In the turmoil of the mission the filled can had tipped over, unfrozen, spilled & then refrozen—right over the front nose hatch. They were frozen in. Both men kicked at the frozen door to no avail. It finally dawned on one of them (Sam could never remember which) that there were other bail out hatches in the plane & the two crewmen jumped out to safety. Sam remembered being so scared that instead of counting to ten he counted, one, two, ten & pulled the cord.

Unfortunately two of the nine crew members did not survive their bail out. Sam came down near a farmhouse. He hid in the barn, but an elderly woman, “close to 90,” came in, & he had to make a decision. He stood up & waved a small American flag, & the woman rushed over, grabbed him under the armpits & lifted him off the ground. “My feet didn’t come back down for a good 20 seconds,” he said. “She took me to the farmhouse. They broke out some wine & cheese, & we started a celebration.” The bombardier eventually ended up in the same Belgian farmhouse a few hours later. The Germans had retreated only two days before & they were the first Americans the farm family had met. Sam & the bombardier returned to England to fly missions after R & R in Scotland. Sam completed 26 missions in the Eighth before the war in Europe ended. Sam returned home to his life in New York & took a series of small jobs. He eventually earned an engineering degree from City College of New York, worked at a consulting company, & raised a family in Connecticut. After retirement, Sam moved to South Carolina with his wife Helga. They have two children.

Sam Najarian in front of B17 Flying Fortress-minSam credited that frozen door with saving the duo’s lives. It forced them to stay in the plane longer which meant the plane travelled farther into Allied territory. Unfortunately two of the nine crew members did not survive their bail out. One never opened his chute & one (the first crew member out of the plane) landed in German territory & was shot.

Sam passed away in 2012. He volunteered at the museum’s Mission Experience every Saturday afternoon guiding visitors through the three-part movie & told them his experiences during WWII. He is sorely missed. He was a great man & friend.

Written by Heather Thies, Director of Education

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