Wednesday, November 11 at 8 p.m. – Secrets of the Dead: Airmen and the Headhunters
(Rochester, NY) –In 1944, as war rages across the globe, an incredible drama unfolded in the remote jungles of
Borneo. A U.S. bomber was hit by Japanese anti-aircraft fire, and as the plane went down, the
surviving crew ejected and parachuted into the wilderness. Pursued by Japanese soldiers, they
were taken in and protected by members of the Dayak tribe—the so-called “wild men of Borneo,”
who were infamous for their grisly custom of hunting and smoking enemy heads. Months later,
the airmen were found by an eccentric British Major, who arrived in the jungle to set up a
guerilla army, and built a runway out of bamboo so rescue planes could pick up the stranded
airmen. Harder to believe than a fictional Hollywood thriller, their true tale is one of courage,
survival, and compassion from the most unlikely sources. Based on the book of the same title by
Judith Heimann and featuring exclusive testimonies from the last surviving airman, veterans
and Dayak heroes, dramatic on-location recreations, archival film footage, and never-before-seen photographs.
Secrets of the Dead series pieces together a thrilling jungle
seen photographs, Airmen and the Headhunters, airs on Wednesday, November 11 at 8 p.m. on WXXI-TV (DT21.1/cable1011/cable11).
“Not only is this a spectacular long-lost story of heroism, perseverance, and ingenuity, it also
reveals a remarkable shift in perception for the downed airmen,” says Jared Lipworth, executive
producer of Secrets of the Dead. “They went from fearing the ‘savage’ Dayaks to admiring
them as compassionate and skilled saviors, and that’s a lesson we can still learn from today.”
Mainly told by Dan Illerich, the last surviving airman; the original Dayaks who protected the
Americans; and the Australian commandoes who helped get them out, the story transports
viewers deep into the heart of Borneo at the height of the Second World War revealing fantastic
tales of survival, bravery and ingenuity. The Dayaks, who hated the Japanese for occupying the
country and killing their beloved missionaries, hid the Americans deep in the jungle. When the
Japanese soldiers approached from the coast, the tribesmen used blowpipes and the banned
practice of headhunting to stop their advances. They even set up an ambush using naked women
as bait, and once the killing was over, invited the Americans to a rare headhunting feast.
The clash of cultures didn’t stop there. Months after the airmen went down, they were found
by British Major Tom Harrisson and his group of Australian commandoes, who had been tasked
with setting up a guerilla army to attack the Japanese from the interior. Harrisson enlisted the
Dayaks to fight, encouraged headhunting and the use of blowpipes against the Japanese, and
concocted a daring plan to build a runway out of bamboo so that planes (and their very brave
pilots) could land in the jungle and take the Americans home—which they eventually did.
Pictured: Dan Illerich with his B-24 Liberator bomber crew
Credit: Courtesy of Dan Illerich
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