Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
‘Defiant’ Portrays Heroism on Every Page
‘Defiant’ Portrays Heroism on Every Page
Mar 12, 2026 7:00 AM

In an age where words like “courage” and “bravery” are often tossed about casually, a new book captures the immense heroism and resolve of 11 American POWs during the war in Vietnam. Alvin Townley closes his new book Defiant with these words, “Together, they overcame more intense hardship over more years than any other group of servicemen and families in American history. We should not forget.” Townley easily makes that case by telling their stories and expanding on previous accounts by including the battle many of their wives waged to draw attention to their plight back home.

Defiant focuses on the Alcatraz 11, captured servicemen who were isolated by munist North Vietnamese in a prison they nicknamed “Alcatraz.” Like many early POWs, these men were tortured. But they faced unimaginable cruelty with steely resistance. Before they were moved to Alcatraz, they were all pivotal leaders at Hoa Lo Prison, reinforcing the Code of Conduct municating through the tap code. At a staged propaganda news conference in 1966, Naval pilot Jeremiah Denton was able to blink out in Morse Code the letters T-O-R-T-U-R-E, allowing the American government to know for the first time the horrific conditions inside the prison. The aviators were beaten with fan belts, kept in stocks and leg irons, tortured with medieval rope devices, and locked away in isolation for years. In his book, When Hell Was in Session, Denton proclaimed, “We can add our testimony to that of great heroes like Solzhenitsyn and Sakharov, who have vividly related what Communism is really about.”

Townley’s book does a masterful job of weaving the stories of these men together to portray how their courage and resistance exemplified, to the highest degree, the principles of freedom. James B. Stockdale, the senior officer of the 11, like other tortured prisoners, was permanently crippled by his captors. His defiance continually inspired those imprisoned with him. Stockdale quoted Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim about the men under mand, “A certain readiness to perish is not so very rare, but it is seldom that you meet men whose souls, steeled in the impenetrable armour of resolution, are ready to fight a losing battle to the last.”

On the home front, many of the wives of the POWs challenged the American government’s ineptitude in dealing with the imprisonment of their spouses. Their organization, in large part led by Sybil Stockdale, helped to build a national campaign which saw the rise of the first bracelets worn for a cause and challenged a somewhat more sympathetic Nixon administration to engage the issue. Their work raised the vital issue of the mistreatment of the POWs on a national stage. That fact coupled with the resistance of hardliners like those locked away in Alcatraz, would lead to more humane treatment in the future. Sadly, Ron Storz, an Air Force aviator, died in captivity at Alcatraz after years of brutal torture by the North Vietnamese.

Townley has written a monumental book about some of the most courageous men in American history. Vietnam has opened up in the last few decades. Americans can visit the country relatively easily. But just a few decades before that, many American aviators who were shot down over the skies of Vietnam were brutally tortured and tormented by an evil and munist regime. One of the strengths of this account is that Townley stresses the Christian faith of these men. Many of them recovered that faith during years of isolation and torture. In his book The Passing of the Night: My Seven Years as a Prisoner of the North Vietnamese, Robinson Risner declared:

To make it, I prayed by the hour. It was automatic, almost subconscious. I did not ask God to take me out of it. I prayed he would give me strength to endure it. When it would get so bad that I did not think I could stand it, I would ask God to ease it and somehow I would make it. He kept me.

Finally, though, the pain and aching increased to where I did not think I could stand it any longer. One day I prayed, ‘Lord, I have to some relief from this pain.’ I quoted the Biblical verse that He would hear us and that we would never be called upon to take more than we could bear.

They memorized verses from the Bible to sustain them and many of the prisoners believed they were in a holy war against munism. Townley touches on a particularly inspirational story how they fought munist captors for the right to worship publicly because it was their right and not something to be merely tolerated. The values they held may seem lost to many Americans today, and I think many of the readers of this account will realize the loss of those values carry a heavy price. Men like Jeremiah Denton, Bob Shumaker, and Howie Rutledge were locked away so long that they came back to a very different America, struggling to define mon purpose.

Townley is terrific at telling plex, often sad, but heroic story. By retelling their years of suffering, he captures a sacrifice that seems unimaginable, until prehend the ideals and character of the men behind it. Defiant is a reminder of the power and discipline of free people who mitted to liberty and defending higher truths. In his 1973 ing, Stockdale stepped off the plane, after enduring years of isolation and torture, and told the assembled:

As that Athenian warrior and poet Sophocles wrote over 2,400 years ago, ‘Nothing is so sweet as to return from the sea and listen to the raindrops on the rooftops of home.’

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
I’m a Giant in Japan. Or, Why Income Inequality is Irrelevant
For most of my life I was, at 5-foot-10, of exactly average height. But in the span of one day in 1989 I became freakishly tall. While I hadn’t grown an inch upward, I had moved 6,000 miles eastward to Okinawa, Japan. Since the average height of native Okinawans was only 5-foot-2, I towered over most every native islander by 8 inches. It was the equivalent of being 6-foot-6 in the United States. Unfortunately, when I would leave the towns...
Go Forth And Create
Are you creative? No, that’s not one of those silly Facebook quizzes; it’s a serious question. Would you describe yourself as “creative?” Turns out, that’s a pretty important question. Folks who study such things say that “creativity” is one of the things employers are looking for in today’s workforce, and not just in places like Silicon Valley. While we value creativity in our culture, it seems as if we’re quashing it in our kids: Common Core doesn’t exactly call for...
On Inequity and Inequality
I would like to clarify that inequity and inequality are overlapping (and related) but not identical sets. Here’s a diagram that might be helpful. The way these terms often get used makes it seem like this distinction could provide some clarity. See also “the generally accepted formal equality principle that Aristotle formulated in reference to Plato: ‘treat like cases as like.'” ...
Samuel Gregg: Economic Freedom And Religious Freedom Are Mutually Reinforcing
On The Daily Caller, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg looks at the connection between economic liberty and religious freedom which, he observes, “has not been so obvious; or at least it wasn’t until cases such as Hobby Lobby’s started making their way through the American court system.” Also not so obvious is how the ever expanding welfare state in many countries — and the growing dependence of some religious charities on state funding — have had a negative impact on...
Pope Francis On Human Dignity
Pope Francis spoke to members of the European Parliament on November 25. The focus of his speech was “dignity:” specifically the transcendent dignity of the human person. He reminded his audience that the protection of dignity was key to rebuilding Europe following World War II, but now, the pope says, ” there are still too many situations in which human beings are treated as objects whose conception, configuration and utility can be programmed, and who can then be discarded when...
What’s a Christian to make of speculation?
The practice of speculation draws mixed reactions among Christians, as some believe it is intrinsically evil and others see great ing from it. Over at Legatus Magazine, Acton’s Director of Research, Samuel Gregg, hopes to shed some light on whether or not Christians should engage in speculation. The Roman Catholic Catechism condemns specific types of speculation, but Gregg argues that the practice could be justified in other situations not addressed by the Catechism. However, before Christians accept or reject it,...
‘We Cannot Accept Trafficking’
Today, Pope Francis met with Orthodox, Anglican, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist and Hindu representatives to sign a Declaration of Religious Leaders against Slavery. Pope Francis thanked those in attendance for making the mitment to end modern slavery in all its forms. He spoke of the spirit of fraternity among believers, along with the knowledge that humans, created in God’s image and likeness, deserve dignity, regardless of their circumstances. Therefore, we declare on each and every one of our creeds that modern...
Moral Capital and the Rule of Law
“If we want to be coherent when addressing poverty,” writes Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg at Public Discourse, “our concerns can’t be rooted in emotivist or relativistic accounts of who human beings are. They must be founded on recognition of each person’s freedom, rationality, and dignity.” In social sciences such as economics, positivism’s ongoing influence encourages the tendency to see values as irrelevant, hopelessly subjective, and hard to measure (which, for some people, means they don’t exist). Thus, making the...
William Allen On Freedom, Liberty
Tuesday, December 2 marks the final Acton Lecture Series for 2014. Acton es William Allen, Emeritus Professor of Political Philosophy in the Department of Political Science and Emeritus Dean, James Madison College, at Michigan State University. Allen will be speaking on “American National Character and the Future of Liberty,” beginning at 11:30 at 98 E. Fulton, Grand Rapids, Michigan. You can register here. Allen spoke (along with Samuel Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research) in 2008 on “What Is Freedom?” as...
Explainer: Human Trafficking and Global Efforts to Abolish Slavery
Tomorrow is the International Day for the Abolition of Slavery, memoration of thedate of the adoption, by the General Assembly, of the United Nations Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others (resolution 317(IV) of 2 December 1949). As part of the effort to help eradicate modern slavery and human trafficking across the world by 2020,Catholic, Anglican, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Jewish, and Orthodox leaders will gather at the Vaticantomorrow to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved