Radio Netherlands Worldwide

SSO Login

More login possibilities:

Close
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Twitter
  • Google
  • LinkedIn
Home
Saturday 26 May RNW - NEWS AND ANALYSIS FROM THE NETHERLANDS IN 10 LANGUAGES, WORLDWIDE 24/7 ON RADIO, TV AND ONLINE
Jasper Schuringa
Map
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Amsterdam, Netherlands

‘Christmas bomb’ hero now tackles terrorism on film

Published on : 25 December 2010 - 1:20am | By Karin van den Boogaert (Photo: RNW/Martien Sleutjes)
More about:

“Flying Dutchman” Jasper Schuringa hit headlines around the world on Christmas Day last year. He was the heroic passenger who tackled a would-be terrorist on a plane bound for Detroit. Now he makes films – about terrorism, for example.

A year ago today, Jasper Schuringa was on the way to visit his sister in Costa Rica via the US when Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab tried to bring down Flight 235. “I’m dead,” thought Mr Schuringa when he heard a bang like a firework and realised there was a fire on board. No one else was doing anything, so he leapt on Abdulmutallab, who’d set his seat on fire as he failed to set off the explosives strapped to his leg.

The Dutchman tried to put out the fire with his bare hands, then dragged the attacker from his seat and helped the crew frisk and handcuff him. The plane landed safely, and the 286 passengers and 11 crew lived to tell the tale.

Mr Schuringa finds it hard to explain why he acted so decisively. He wasn’t sitting near the Nigerian. The cabin crew did little to help matters. “A stewardess kept screaming at the terrorist, ‘What are you doing? What are you doing?’” he says, “but she didn’t do anything else.”

Medal
He admits he’s a man with a cool head in a crisis – his friends and family say so too. For example, he once witnessed a serious car crash. “I stayed very calm and went to help with a few other people. We immediately agreed who would do what, and that we shouldn’t let ourselves be shocked by what we found.”

Jasper Schuringa interviewed on CNN
Jasper Schuringa interviewed on CNN

This month Jasper Schuringa was awarded a silver medal by the Carnegie Hero Fund. Yet he doesn’t see himself as a hero, because heroes are people who give their lives for others. His main thought was to save his own life. But the president of the Carnegie Hero Fund doesn’t agree with Mr Schuringa’s definition. “It’s the people who don’t see it themselves,” he says.

Jungle
Perhaps heroism runs in Jasper Schuringa’s family. His grandfather also won a medal. He had a rubber plantation in Jakarta that supplied rubber for aircraft tyres and gas masks during the Second World War.

Or perhaps it’s because he’s led an adventurous life since he was a child. His father worked for Dutch oil giant Shell on the island of Curacão, where Jasper was born, and later in Gabon and Oman. In Gabon the family lived in the middle of the jungle. Once a month, a small plane took the women into town to do the shopping. Mr Schuringa’s childhood pastimes were spotting elephants, fishing and enjoying the rainforest.

Go with the flow
At university the expat’s son began studying physiotherapy, but after the first year he switched to his real love, film. After training in Miami and a few jobs in the Netherlands, he set up his own company, Go with the Flow productions.

He wants to make films that touch people. Films to make people think about contemporary issues. Terrorism, for example. And so the wheel has come full circle. The cosmopolitan Jasper Schuringa, on the way to the US – as he sees it a country with a one-sided view since 9/11 – foiled a terrorist attack. A year later he’s making a film about terrorism.

 

Discussion

Anonymous 27 December 2010 - 3:49pm

He better be careful about what he says about terrorism. As we all know, you can be put on trial for films that upset the politically correct crowd in the Netherlands.

Desiree S.I. Flores 25 December 2010 - 3:13pm / Curacao/Netherlands/UK/Germany

By saving his own life, 296 other people also lived to tell the tale, I would say that's heroic. And when I heard
he was born in Curacao I was even more happy after watching the news,as I was born there, too! I hope he has recovered from the shock. That little place has fostered many special types of people, people who have gone on to do interesting things, be it in: sports, music,medicine, or just saving people's lives! May RNW report a lot of good about the people of the ex-colonies so the general view on the street, prejudices, will also be good ones. This movie about terrorism will most probably show how perception shapes our world and we have to take responsibility for what the political & media hype can create.
I look forward to seeing the movie, may he reach a big audience in the States as well, now that he's on the American map, and go on to be very successful. Tur kos bon pa 2011!

Post new comment

Please be reminded all comments must be in English, short and to the point - guideline 250 words. Abusive and inappropriate comments will be removed.

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <p> <br>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.

More information about formatting options

Video highlights

Dutch beachcombers: a dying breed
Dutch beachcombers are a dying breed. In the past, objects would regularly...
Shell presented with "Oily Mary" cocktail from Niger Delta
Friends of the Earth Netherlands has offered "Oily Mary"...

RNW on Facebook

Sign up for our newsletters

Email news bulletin

What's on - Programme Preview

Press Review - of the leading Dutch newspapers every weekday

Media Network

Euro Hit 40 - Europe's No. 1 chart show

RNW - News and analysis from the Netherlands in 10 languages, worldwide 24/7 on radio, television and online