News1972 Plane Crash Survivor's Harrowing Tale of Survival and Desperation

1972 Plane Crash Survivor’s Harrowing Tale of Survival and Desperation

Dr. Roberto Canessa, who ⁣resorted to cannibalism after a 1972 plane crash​ in the Andes Mountains, is reflecting on that fateful accident.

Canessa ‍is delving⁤ into the crash, in which 16 of 45 passengers⁤ and crew members stayed alive in freezing conditions ​by‍ eating the dead, in a “Today” ⁣show interview that aired Thursday.

mostbet

“I thought I was going to‍ die,” he said.

The segment was partly spurred by ⁢“Society of the Snow,” a thriller about the harrowing disaster that’s ⁤set to stream on Netflix ⁢next month in‌ the U.S. Canessa, who was part of ⁤a Uruguayan rugby team headed for a match in Chile at the time of the incident, has already‍ seen the​ film.

“I was immersed in that place again,” Canessa said​ in the interview. “I was back to the fuselage.”

Those who ⁢ultimately survived Uruguayan Air⁣ Force Flight‌ 571, which left Montevideo for Santiago before crashing in October 1972, managed to hold on for 72 days. There were 33 initial​ survivors, until an avalanche and starvation claimed a handful of‍ lives.

Canessa, who was a ‍19-year-old medical student ‍at the time of the accident, ⁤told “Today” about the decision to ⁣eat the dead.

“I thought ⁣if I would die,” he said, “I would be proud that my ​body would be used for someone else.”

The doctor has previously⁣ recalled ⁢ how the‍ survivors ​cut the flesh off ​the dead “amid much torment and soul-searching,” and​ laying ‌“the thin​ strips of frozen flesh aside ‌on a⁣ piece of ​sheet ​metal.”

“Each⁤ of us finally consumed our piece⁣ when we could bear to,” he said in a book.

A body⁤ in​ the snow outside the wreckage of the crashed plane.A body in the snow ​outside the wreckage of ⁤the crashed plane.

Bettmann/Getty Images

This was dramatized ​in “Alive,” a 1993 film starring Ethan Hawke.​ The⁤ true story also strongly parallels the premise‍ of “Yellowjackets,” a TV series touching on ‌the ‌legal and ‍psychological consequences of cannibalism.

Canessa told People in 2016 that he and another teammate eventually ‍managed to find a⁣ shepherd who “was generous enough⁤ to go and search‍ for⁣ help for us.” He also ⁢said ⁣that something his mother​ told him ‌long before the crash had helped saved him.

“I remembered very vividly my mother ‍and I went ​to⁤ [visit the mother of] ‍ a friend who had died and she was devastated,” ​he told People. “And my mother told ‌me, ‘If one of my‍ children died, I couldn’t make it ​through life, I would die ⁤of sadness.’ So I had to‍ go⁣ back and ⁣tell my mother, ‘Don’t cry anymore, I’m alive.’ ⁤So I think that was the driving‍ force for me.”

Canessa, who⁣ is⁣ now a pediatric⁤ cardiologist, ‍reportedly has regular reunions with other crash survivors. While he has no tips on how to survive ⁢a plane crash,

» …
Read ‌More rnrn

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Subscribe Today

GET EXCLUSIVE FULL ACCESS TO PREMIUM CONTENT

SUPPORT NONPROFIT JOURNALISM

EXPERT ANALYSIS OF AND EMERGING TRENDS IN CHILD WELFARE AND JUVENILE JUSTICE

TOPICAL VIDEO WEBINARS

Get unlimited access to our EXCLUSIVE Content and our archive of subscriber stories.

Exclusive content

Latest article

More article