History Daily - The Miracle of the Andes
Episode Date: October 13, 2025October 13, 1972. An airplane carrying members of a rugby team crashes in the Andes mountains on a routine flight from Uruguay to Chile; survivors fight to stay alive. This episode originally aired i...n 2023. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's October 13th,
1972.
An airplane owned by the Uruguayan Air Force
crosses over the Andes Mountains.
On board are 19 players of the old Christians,
an amateur Uruguayan rugby team that chartered the plane to take them to a match in Chile.
To break up the monotony of the trip,
21-year-old Nando Perado cracks jokes with his teammates.
Their laughter is a welcome respite from the stress of their travels.
A storm over the Andes forced the plane to land in Argentina last night,
and the whole team is eager to finally make it to their destination safe and sound.
Spirits are high as the plane begins to descend.
Players and their supporters hardly pay the growing...
turbulence any mind, continuing to joke and laugh with one another and toss around rugby balls.
But when the aircraft suddenly dropped several hundred feet, cabin grows quiet. Something obviously
is wrong. Nando glances out his window and instead of seeing cloud cover, he sees the black
ridge of a mountain. Nando and his fellow passengers scramble to fasten their seabelt as they
realize they're headed straight toward a mountain. The plane's engine strains and the pilot tries to
gain altitude, but it's too late. There's a terrible screeching as the lower part of the
plane hits the mountain. Nando braces himself as pieces of the aircraft are torn away, throwing the airplane
against the mountain again and again till it skids down the side of a glacier, finally coming to a stop
at 12,000 feet in the snow-capped Andes. Knocked unconscious during the crash, Nando will fall into a
coma for three days. When he wakes up, he'll discover the 12 of the 45
people on board died in the crash, including one of the pilots and his own mother. But Nando will
have little time or energy to grieve as he and the remaining survivors will have to contend with
extreme conditions in a fight for their lives after their plane crashes in the Andes on October 13th,
1972. When the show continues in just a few seconds, I'm going to repeat our catchphrase,
history is made every day, and it's true. All around us, history is happening, but I want to make a little
history of my own. So I've been planning something exciting. A History Daily
Live show, and I want you to make history with me. So to be the first to hear about tour
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in the history books, so go to historydaily live.com.
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From Noiser and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is October 13, 1972, The Miracle of the Andes.
It's October 13th, 1972, immediately after Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 crashed into the Andes,
these mountains. As agonized cries ring out inside what's left of the aircraft, rugby player
and medical student Gustavo Zerbino jumped into action. He and Roberto Canessa, also a medical
student, get to work tending to the injured, barely able to comprehend the dizzying turn of events
that just occurred. Mere minutes ago, the passengers of Flight 571 were talking, singing,
and laughing, but while they were enjoying their time in the cabin, trouble was brewing in the cockpit.
it. With heavy clouds obscuring the peaks of the Andes, the plane's pilots misjudged their location.
After prematurely reporting that they were out of the Andes, they were authorized by air traffic
controllers to begin their descent. But in fact, they were still in the mountain range and
unable to avert the disastrous crash caused by their early descent. Now the plane's 33 survivors
must deal with the fallout. Many of those who aren't already dead are either unconscious or
critically injured. Gustavo and Roberto do their best to provide medical care to those most in need,
but keeping their fellow passengers alive is no small order. The highly remote location of the
crash puts them out of reach of civilization. There's only so much they can do with so little
supplies, and the elements are not in their favor. Ultimately, they face a grim reality. They are all
alone with little food and below freezing temperatures. Still, the survivors are determined to do what they
can. While Gustavo and Roberto handle first aid, surviving members of the rugby team begin work
fashioning the remains of the airplane into a shelter. They tear out seats to barricade themselves
inside the main body of the plane and fend off the cold. But despite their efforts, five more
passengers die on their first night in the Andes. And while the crash victims fight to stay alive,
the Chilean Air Search and Rescue Service struggles to locate them. The survivors tried to write
out SOS and lipstick on the white roof of the plane, but the effort is in vain. They run out of
lipstick before the letters are large enough, and search planes are unable to locate the wreckage
in the vast mountain range. And without weather-appropriate clothing and barely any food
beyond candy bars and wine, both the authorities and crash survivors know that time is running
out. In the days following the crash, the surviving passengers are as resourceful as possible.
Marcelo Perez, the captain of the rugby team, assumes leadership of the survival effort
and helps keep up the morale of the survivors as they hunker down for the long road ahead of them.
Together, they devise a method to make drinkable water from the snow.
By using pieces of sheet metal like warming devices, they're able to use the sun's rays to melt snow,
then capture the water using empty wine bottles.
To stay warm, the survivors remove the wool covers from the airplane seats and use them as blankets.
To move around the area outside the plane, they fashion the seat cushions into snowshoes.
Meanwhile, planes continue to scour the Andes with no luck.
The survivors are able to listen along to updates on the rescue efforts
using a small transistor radio they found on the plane,
but they're unable to contact the outside world.
Then on the third day in the Andes, Nando Perado awakes from his coma
after sustaining a fractured skull in the crash.
He learns that his mother perished in the air.
the accident, and that while his 19-year-old sister is still alive, she is critically injured.
Mando takes a small bite of food, before then turning his attention to his sibling,
giving her whatever care and comfort he can while praying she makes it through.
Meanwhile, the survivors fine-tune their plan to ration what little food they have left.
They have eight chocolate bars, a tin of mussels, three small jars of jam,
a container of almonds, a few dates, candies, dried plums, and several,
bottles of wine. Somehow they must find a way to spread this among 28 survivors. It's no easy
feat, considering they have no idea how long they'll be stranded. Not to mention, the majority of them
are young athletes with big appetites. Bundled up with his ailing sister inside the plane,
Nando listens as the survivors discuss their options. With no way of knowing when they'll be
discovered by the search and rescue teams, the mood is tense, becoming ominous. And Nando, still
nursing his own injuries, worries for himself and his sister. The path ahead will be treacherous
and heartbreaking. Three days after waking from his coma, Nando will watch his sister take her final
breaths. Shortly after, the survivors will run out of food and will have to find a new way
to nourish themselves. Desperate, they'll try eating cotton and leather from the plane seats,
but it won't be enough. And with no other options available, they'll agree to do the unthinkable.
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It's the
evening of
October 29th
1972
17 days
after the
crash of
Uruguayan
Air Force Flight 571.
Amid the stark, silent landscape of the Andes,
21-year-old Nando Perado struggles to sleep
inside the makeshift's shelter of the plane.
His body aches with hunger and exhaustion.
The past week and a half has been the hardest
Nando has ever endured.
Since the death of his sister,
matters have only grown more dire.
On the group's 11th day in the Andes,
they heard on their transistor radio
that the search for them has been called off,
surrounded only by rock and ice with no animals or vegetation to speak of and no help on the way,
the survivors could only come to one conclusion.
If they wanted to stay alive, they had to resort to cannibalism.
The decision, though simple, was not easy.
The survivors are all Roman Catholic, a religion that condemns the act of cannibalism.
Fearing eternal damnation, many struggled with the idea of eating human flesh for religious reasons
as much as any other natural aversion to it.
The survivors tried to weigh their options but found they had none.
It was terrible to even contemplate consuming the body of any human,
let alone their friends, family, and teammates.
But if they wanted to survive, the group agreed it was unavoidable.
They needed to eat the flesh of the deceased.
With a group's consent, medical student Roberto Canessa
used broken glass from a windshield to cut tiny pieces off one of the frozen bodies,
Slowly and reluctantly, each survivor consumed their strip when they could bear to.
Many struggled to keep it down, but it was the only path forward.
So they also mutually agreed that if any of them died, the others could eat them for sustenance too.
These drastic lengths trouble Nando, who is also determined to protect the bodies of his mother and sister.
He praised they're somehow found before his family becomes the group's next meal.
But as Nando lies inside the plane, he tries to.
not to think about the horrors of the past or future. He needs rest now. And as the temperature
drops, he tosses and turns before sleep finally comes to him. But soon Nando and his fellow
survivors are rudely awakened by an unsettling sound, soft but growing roar of what can only be
an avalanche. Without warning, a cascade of snow races down the mountainside. The plain, their only
sanctuary, is swiftly and completely buried, sealed under a blanket of cold.
crushing snow. The whole party is trapped inside the plane. And as the cramp space quickly runs out
of breathable air, their situation becomes even more desperate. Nando springs into action. Using a metal
pole from a luggage rack, he prides open a window in the pilot's cabin and pokes through the
snow, providing much-needed ventilation and fresh, breathable air. But for eight people, it's already
too late. They've died by asphyxiation, bringing the crash's total death toll
to 26. The avalanche is another brutal blow to the survivor's spirit. They work to dig themselves
out of the snow, but a raging blizzard ultimately forces them to spend the next three days in the
cramped shelter sitting side by side with the bodies of those who perished in the avalanche until finally
the sun comes out. The snow begins to melt and the group is able to break free of the plane.
Finally outside again, the survivors contemplate their next move. Among those killed in the
Avalanche was team captain and de facto leader Marcelo Perez. As they try to find their balance
without his leadership, they decide to form an expedition team made up of Nando and two others
who will venture out and try to find help. For the next week, this expedition team rests up,
preparing their bodies for the trip ahead, while the others do the manual labor around the crash site
to keep their survival effort going. Then the explorers set off. They spend several hours hiking
through the snow until they come across the tail section of the aircraft, about a mile
downhill from their shelter inside the plane's body. There they find luggage, containing valuable
supplies, including more chocolates, three meat patties, a bottle of rum, cigarettes, extra clothes,
comic books and medicine. They spend the night camping inside the tail section, excited about their
discovery. But the next day is not so pleasant. The group continues hiking and is forced to spend the night
outside in the elements, where they nearly freeze to death.
The next morning, they return to the tail section with the goal of removing the aircraft's
batteries, which they hope will make a two-way radio operable back at the main camp, allowing
them to make an SOS call. But the batteries proved too heavy to carry. So instead, Nando and his
team hike up to the main shelter and carry the two-way radio back down to the batteries.
When they return, they're devastated to discover that the batteries aren't a match. With their only
hope of rescue foiled, many of the survivors will begin to doubt that they'll ever make it off the
mountain alive. As the days stretch on, more will perish from injuries, starvation, or both. But Nando
will refuse to give up hope. Summoning whatever strength and courage he has left, he'll begin
planning a new expedition, one that may be their last chance of survival. It's December 12, 1972,
two months after the crash of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571.
21-year-old college student and rugby player Nando Perado bids farewell to the group
before setting off with the two other members of the expedition team.
For the past few weeks, Nando and his fellow survivors have been evaluating options to get them
out of the Andes.
With their remote location at such a high altitude, search and rescue teams have been
unable to pinpoint their location.
They've come to the conclusion that the only viable option is to be a very important.
to hike over the mountain peaks to the west and descend in search of help.
Today, Nando and his expedition members are ready to go.
Slowly but surely they make their way to the 15,000-foot peak.
They try to conserve their energy and morale.
By the fourth day of the track, though,
it becomes clear that it's going to take much longer to reach the peak
than they had originally calculated, let alone the valleys of Chile that lay beyond.
With their food supplies running low,
Nando suggests that one member of the expedition team
returned to the crash site, which will leave enough rations for Nando and one other to survive.
The group agrees.
A few hours later, Nando and his remaining partner finally reached the summit,
but their initial celebration ends when they see nothing but the peaks of more mountains
spread out before them in all directions.
Realizing they're deeper in the mountains than they thought,
Nando's partner becomes inconsolable,
but Nando convinces him to keep going.
The two men hike for a few more days, using a river running between the mountains as a guide toward any sign of human life.
And finally, on the ninth day of their expedition, their prayers are answered.
They spot a herd of cows, a sure sign that civilization is nearby.
Shortly after, Anando then spots several men on horseback on the other side of the river.
Eventually, he's able to get their attention, and the men help that disoriented survivors evacuate on horseback
and alert authorities of their discovery.
The final remaining survivors will then be rescued and flown out of the crash site a few days later.
Of the 45 people aboard Flight 571, only 16 will survive the ordeal.
The remains of the rest will eventually be buried at the crash site, and a memorial would be erected there.
The incident will garner major international attention, especially after learning the survivors had to resort to cannibalism.
Several books will be published, including one by Nando, and Hollywood will produce a film about
the harrowing survival story of those who underwent a 72-day fight for their lives
after their plane crashed in the Andes on October 13, 1972.
Next on History Daily, October 14th, 1322.
During the First War of Scottish Independence, the Scots win a decisive victory at the Battle
of Old Bilein.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited, and executive produced by me,
Lindsey Graham. Audio editing by
Mohamed Shazee. Sound design by Katrina
Zemry. Music by Lindsay Graham. This episode
is written and researched by Scott Weiss.
Executive producers are Alexander Curry Buckner for
Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noisor.
