An American Who Died Fighting for Indonesia's Freedom
Bobby Freeberg, a 27-year-old pilot from Kansas, disappeared while flying a supply-filled cargo plane over the Indonesian jungle
- By Simon Montlake
- Smithsonian.com, March 23, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Freeberg was a mercenary, flying missions for a foreign power. He was planning to save money and return to America; he was engaged to a nurse he’d met in Manila. Indonesians called him “Bob the Brave.” But his work also began to exert an emotional pull on him and make him identify with a political cause. He wrote to his family of the injustice suffered by Indonesians at the hands of the Dutch and the resilience of ordinary people. “It is pretty wonderful to see a people believe in the freedom that we Americans enjoy (and) ready to fight for the achievement of this view,” he wrote.
Bickham says that Freeberg went to Indonesia because he loved to fly and stayed because he admired Indonesia’s cause. His disappearance was devastating to the family, she says, all the more so because of the lack of a body and some mistrust of the U.S. government, which initially sided with the Netherlands in the conflict before swinging behind the fledgling Indonesian republic. Insurers refused to pay out on Freeberg’s missing plane. His fiancée, a Naval nurse from Deposit, New York, died last year without ever marrying. “Her niece told me that she asked for Bobby on her death bed,” Bickham writes in an email.
Curator Alisjahbana had heard about Freeberg, who was dubbed the “One Man Indonesian Air Force” by the media. In June 2006, she hosted Donald Rumsfeld, then U.S. Defense Secretary and a former Navy pilot, at her museum during an official visit. Knowing that Rumsfeld was a military history buff, she told him the story and asked him to send her Freeberg’s wartime records. That got the ball rolling for last year’s exhibition, entitled “RI002: Trace of a Friendship.” The catalog leaves open the question of what happened to Freeberg after the plane went missing in 1948.
Meanwhile, Bickham, 57, who was born in Parsons and lives in Half Moon Bay, California, was feeling her own way through family lore about Freeberg. Her father, Paul, was the youngest of three brothers, who all served in World War Two (Paul was in Europe). The family spoke rarely of Bobby, says Bickham, as they felt so traumatized by their loss. “They spent so much money and went through so much without getting any answers,” she says.
Bickham was always curious about her uncle’s mysterious disappearance. But it wasn’t until 2008, when the U.S. Embassy contacted the family, that she was drawn into the search. Before her father died in January 2009, he gave Bickham around 200 of Freeberg’s letters and told her to find out what she could of his fate. That hunt is still on.
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Comments (5)
He is hero for me like other Patriot In Indonesia.
Posted by Ras Eko on November 10,2012 | 04:24 AM
Pak Eko,
Saya a.azis ahmad dari KL,malaysia.i am very intrested about your father as i have some that i downloaded from the permesta site.I also hv read all about yr father's experiences during the permesta struggle.I am very impress with him.
Pse respond so that we can talk more.
thanks n regards.
Posted by a.aziz ahmad on August 4,2011 | 02:57 AM
My Father, Petit Muharto Kartodirdjo was the co-pilot and a friend and admirer of Bob Freeberg. His zest for flying and drive for national independence brought the two together. It was also his ability to speak good English (rare among Indonesians) and his general knowledge of the terrain that kept them close and successful in dodging detection during their adventurous runs. He missed the final flight to get married to my mother and survived later to become an air force officer and diplomat. His air force career took a turn when he joined the PRRI/Permesta rebellion against Sukarno and growing communism. He was later repatriated back into the air force during the Suharto era and retired. He has always been driven to find out what really happened to Bobby Freeberg and bring closure to a true life mystery. He spent many years collecting information, writing to archives in Holland and America, collecting relevant newspaper clippings and compiling all the correspondences. He composed them into a manuscript for a book. Unfortunately he died before it was ever put to print.
Posted by Eko Muhatma Kartodirdjo on May 21,2010 | 09:18 AM
Interesting article.
Posted by Anonymous on March 26,2010 | 02:52 PM
We respected and admired all international heroes whom helped colonial people to liberate their nations from the iron heels of colonialism,certainly also included Bobby Freeberg.His name echoes in eternity.
Posted by toby karl on March 24,2010 | 10:47 AM