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Free for All to Freedom

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Free for All to Freedom Late afternoon on Friday, July 13, 1956 a twin engine DC-3 from the People's Republic of Hungary made an unscheduled landing, some 250 miles off its original course, at a NATO air force base still under construction. For those who lived behind the Iron Curtain, these were the darkest days of history, with no way to escape and no hope for the future. But on this day, seven Hungarian youngsters would dramatically risk everything in order to taste something that others took for granted: freedom. And they would do it at 10,000 feet. They would hijack a commercial airliner and fly to freedom. Free for All to Freedom is their story. Read Free for All to Freedom and feel in vivid detail what conditions were like living under tyranny and oppression, and re-live their incredible and dramatic escape to freedom. HOW DID IT HAPPEN? Where was I, what did I do or not do to let it get this far? Who was responsible for this firestorm? Who started it? The more I'd been thinking - and I had a lot of time for that - the clearer the answer became: It was me. ME! It would have been easy to say, "I did not see it coming," but I should have. It was my country. It was my decision - or the lack thereof - to let the barbarians rise to power. The prisons were built; first for the minds and then for the bodies. The insidious disease, Communism, was marching and I was marching along. I believed in false promises and ignored history. Tyranny does not start with the gulags and gas chambers, it ends with them. I remained silent and hoped that this time it was going to be different. I did not yell "FIRE!" when I should have. Now it was too late; the fire was raging, the fire hydrants were dry, and all the firemen were dead. Excerpted from Free for All to Freedom CHAPTER XV The Cockpit of Flight 387 at 10,000 Feet over Hungary Friday, July 13, 1956 at 1455 Hour THE BASTARD WAS IN THE COCKPIT all along thought George, as he faced the fifth man and stared into the barrel of Elek Doktor's Walther PPK. The AVO agent was waiting for George fully prepared, while trying to steady himself on the bouncing plane, with his gun in hand. George aimed the Zbrojovka with two bullets, one in the chamber and one in the magazine, slightly above the head of the AVO man and pulled the trigger. There was a small click. Ten-year old bullets just don't work that well, he thought, as he smashed the useless gun onto the forehead of Elek Doktor with full force. The plane rolled into another nose-dive throwing the already dazed AVO agent straight up to the ceiling with his feet off the floor dangling in the air. He was hanging on to some protruding gadgets from the cockpit's roof with his left hand, holding his gun in his right. Then for an infinitely small time, his memory deserted him. He could not remember whether he loaded his Walther PPK or not. When the plane went into a sharp climb he got slammed to the floor and had a chance to act. His years of training took over: when in doubt, reload. Elek Doktor, pulled the top of his gun back released it again, aimed at George's chest and pulled the trigger.

292 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 2, 2011

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Frank Iszak

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Ron.
Author 2 books169 followers
January 4, 2020
“Tyranny doesn’t start with the gulags and gas chambers, it ends with them.”

Thrilling tale of a group of young people brought together by the very government that oppressed them. Their flight from Communist-controlled Hungary to West Germany in 1956 is the stuff of legends. The tyranny of totalitarians regimes is still with us; history repeats, even with variations.

“But God was omnipotent and His Ways could be strange and unpredictable. He had the answer. He was just holding it back.”

Iszak then and now credits divine intervention for their success. He gives sufficient detail that skeptics can draw their own conclusions.

“I was thinking last night. If we make love, I can’t wear a white wedding dress when we get married. Hmmm, I thought. Then I kind of mentally inventoried my wardrobe at home, and I realized that I don’t even have a white dress. On top of that, you never asked to marry me anyway, did you?” Iszak’s future wife.

I am wary of “true” stories first told over fifty years after the fact. Too convenient for potential inventors. Iszak admits he changes some names and provides basic documentation that the escape really happened. For the details we must trust him.

“The Kremlin-controlled media behind the Iron Curtain referred to the event as ‘Air Piracy’. They would have called it hijacking, but no one had coined the word yet.” Hijacking was in use long before. He refers to Skyjacking.

“For seven just-liberated slaves, the sun had risen for the second time that day. This time in the West.”
Profile Image for Connie Snow.
36 reviews3 followers
December 16, 2011
I know Frank. I know him as the strictest Pilates teacher ever. Who knew that he had this amazing life?!! No wonder he's such a stickler for precision! Very well written. An amazing story.
Profile Image for Jane Thompson.
Author 5 books11 followers
January 16, 2019
Escape from Hungary Story

This is an interesting book. The author tells the story of seven people who flew to West Germany on a DC 8, a commercial plane. The escapees did not plan carefully, but were helped along by internal problems in Hungary. They were surprised by their success
Profile Image for Ann.
206 reviews
February 5, 2019
knuckle biting. So much could have gone wrong. Saved by fortunate circumstances from military distracted by overthrow of Hungarian leader to the only plane with a plywood door into the cockpit. Only a few months later Hungarian Revolution broke out. First international news I followed. Still remember photos from Life of teenagers throwing Molotov cocktails at Russian tanks.
14 reviews
June 23, 2019
Historical event recalled

Loved reading of this first air hijack to freedom. Especially interesting was author’s narration of how communism affected the common Hungarian & his wandering employment to remain out of reach of the “officials.”
97 reviews
August 3, 2019
An excellent and nail biting read! I learned so much about Communism in Hungary after WWII, and the despair people were forced to live in, causing some to escape. Couldn’t put down the book towards the end!
1 review
October 21, 2013
This is a gripping thriller that tells the story of seven Hungarians desperate to leave the country which has now been tightly bound behind the communist Iron Curtain. The story of the hijacking, and the back-story, are both very interesting. I only put this book down when forced to. I came across the book because I am acquainted with the wife of George, who was the pilot. The Kindle edition I am reading seems to be very poorly edited - many typos, grammatical errors, run-on sentences, and incomplete sentences, often forcing me to re-read a sentence. Normally I have a difficult time overlooking such things but it did not hinder my reading at all in this instance (beyond my mental editing while reading along!). I highly recommend this book, not because of my friend, but because it is a fascinating read and because in many ways the description of life in Hungary serves as a cautionary tale about communism and socialism, which I see as grave dangers in the modern world.
219 reviews4 followers
March 28, 2016
True story of one of the very first hijackings of a commercial airplane. The author and his associates escaped from communistic Hungary in 1956.

This a very personal book. Most of the book, and the most interesting parts are about the author's life as a child and young adult, during the war and then under the communist government. The events, astounding as they are, are narrated very matter-of-factly, with a very personal voice. The writing style is unusual --- perhaps it should have had more editing, but the unconventional narration adds to the authenticity.

It's a very interesting read.
734 reviews4 followers
July 22, 2019
A daring escape from Communist Hungary by seven souls brave enough to escape OVER the Iron Curtain by hijacking an Hungarian Air passenger plane, on July 13, 1956!! One of the hijackers was a former Hungarian Air Force pilot who took over the controls, not knowing how much fuel they had or without any navigation aids. If they were forced to crash land before clearing the border, they would face certain death sentences(if they survived the crash)!
This is a thrilling story of disparate choices!
11 reviews
December 13, 2012
This was interesting, but if it weren't for the circumstances, I probably wouldn't have finished it. I picked it up because I was house sitting and had no books with me. This looked to be the most interesting option at the house.
Profile Image for Constance.
260 reviews
July 10, 2012
This book needed proof-reading before printing. Tons of grammar problems but a riveting read for me still.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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