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
On the morning of September 29, 1948, a Douglas DC-3 cargo plane took off from Jogjakarta on the island of Java. Aboard the flight were five crewmen, one passenger, medical supplies and 20 kilograms of gold. Registered as RI002, the plane was the backbone of Indonesia’s fledgling air force in its independence movement, which was fighting for survival against the Netherlands’ colonial army. Within a year, the Dutch would be forced to hand over power to the Republic of Indonesia, ending a four-year war of liberation in the wake of Japan’s defeat in 1945 (Japan had invaded and occupied Indonesia during World War II).
But the six men aboard RI002, including its captain, Bobby Freeberg, a blond-haired, blue-eyed 27-year-old from Parsons, Kansas, never saw this victory. Sometime after the plane took off from the town of Tanjung Karang on the southern tip of Sumatra, it disappeared. Thirty years later, two farmers found part of its wreckage in a remote jungle, along with scattered human remains. Indonesia promptly declared the five fallen countrymen to be heroes who had died in the course of duty.
For Freeberg, a highly decorated Navy pilot, the wait for recognition has taken even longer. Last May, he was honored in an exhibition at Indonesia’s National Archives in the capital of Jakarta, along with Petit Muharto, his former co-pilot and friend, who missed the final flight. Freeberg is now recognized as an American who helped Indonesia win its independence. “He’s a common national hero,” insists Tamalia Alisjahbana, the show’s curator and director of Indonesia’s National Archives Building.
However, this flurry of interest is bittersweet for Freeberg’s family, who still wrestle with his dramatic disappearance. His niece, Marsha Freeberg Bickham, believes that her uncle didn’t die in a plane crash but was instead captured and imprisoned by the Dutch, and later died in captivity.
According to Bickham, not long after RI002 vanished, Kansas Senator Clyde Reed, a family friend from Parsons, told Freeberg’s parents that their son was alive and that he was trying to get him released from prison. But that was the last the Freeberg family would hear, as Senator Reed died of pneumonia in 1949.
Freeberg was well known to authorities as an American pilot working for the Indonesians, but Dutch archives show no record of his capture, explains William Tuchrello, the Library of Congress attaché in Jakarta, who helped research the exhibition. Tuchrello is mystified as to why there might have been a coverup of what happened to Freeberg’s plane. “We asked the Dutch, ‘Is there anything in your files that would verify any of this?’” he says. None has turned up. For her part, Alisjahbana has asked a Dutch historian to submit the case to a TV show in the Netherlands in which experts try to solve mysteries from the past. One person who never gave up hope of tracing “Fearless Freeberg,” as his Navy buddies called him, was Muharto, his Indonesian co-pilot. He kept in touch with Freeberg’s family until his death in 2000. “Bobby lit a light in him. When I met him 40 years later, it was still lit,” says Alisjahbana.
Born into a privileged Javanese family, Muharto was a medical student in Batavia, as Jakarta was then called, when Japan invaded in 1942. When the independence struggle broke out he decided to join the air force. The problem was that Indonesia had neither aircraft nor pilots. So Muharto was sent to Singapore and Manila to find commercial airlines willing to defy a Dutch blockade on the rebels. Without an air bridge to bring in arms and medicines and fly out spices and gold, the revolution was sunk.
One pilot willing to take a chance was Freeberg, who had left the Navy in 1946 and failed to find a civil aviation job back home. Back in the Philippines, he began flying for CALI, an airline in Manila, and saved up enough to buy his own DC-3. Later that year, he began flying exclusively for the Republic of Indonesia, which designated his plane as RI002. He was told that RI001 was reserved for the future plane of Indonesia’s first president after independence. Indeed, the 20 kilograms of gold carried on RI002’s final flight – and never recovered – was intended to be used to purchase more aircraft.
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Comments (6)
As an American who lived in Indonesia in the early '90s, this is a pretty interesting article! I'm curiously to find out what his fate really was.
Posted by indotexan on April 30,2013 | 08:48 PM
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