Note sull'episodio
Picture a soldier scaling a 400-foot cliff into heavy artillery fire, lowering 75 wounded men to safety one by one, all while steadfastly refusing to carry a single weapon. The real story of Desmond Doss is even more gripping than the Hollywood film.
This deep dive examines the first conscientious objector to receive the Medal of Honor, a man of absolute conviction whose ethics constantly clashed with the institution of war. We explore his Seventh Day Adventist foundation, the mechanics of his impossible rescue, and the painful, lifelong physical cost of his heroism.
- Doss turned down a legal draft deferment to serve, calling himself a conscientious cooperator who would save lives but never take one.
- He lowered wounded men down the cliff using a double bowline knot harness and a tree stump as a friction anchor, one soldier ...Â