Neerja Bhanot, The Hero Of Pan Am Flight 73 Who Sacrificed Herself To Save Hundreds

Neerja Bhanot, The Hero Of Pan Am Flight 73 Who Sacrificed Herself To Save Hundreds




Twenty-two-year-old Indian air hostess Neerja Bhanot was always a woman of courage and convictions. Despite the traditions of her culture and her family's protests, she left her arranged marriage when her husband proved abusive. Then she struck out on her own and began working as both a model and a flight attendant for Pan Am. But shortly after she began her new career in the skies, disaster struck when a flight she was working was hijacked by four terrorists in 1986. Though she was new to the job, she proved to be the greatest hero of the entire ordeal.⁠
Over the course of 17 harrowing hours, she helped both the pilots and hundreds of passengers to escape. In the end, she was killed while using her body to protect three children from gunfire.⁠
Bhanot was posthumously awarded medals of bravery from India, Pakistan, and the United States. And one of the children she saved grew up to be a pilot himself and credited Bhanot for his decision. 

Click the link in our profile for her heroic story.

When hijackers took Pan Am Flight 73 hostage in September 1986, Neerja Bhanot bravely helped passengers escape and was ultimately killed while shielding three children from a hail of bullets.

Neerja Bhanot was working as a senior flight attendant for Pan American World Airways when tragedy struck on the morning of Sept. 5, 1986. While on a routine stopover in Pakistan, Pan Am Flight 73 was hijacked by four armed Palestinian terrorists. Though nearly everyone was paralyzed with fear, Neerja Bhanot wasted no time in trying to diffuse the situation.

Though she was only 22 at the time, Bhanot’s quick thinking saved the pilots and hundreds of others from a treacherous 17-hour ordeal that claimed 20 lives — including her own. A hero to the end, she was shot to death while protecting three children from gunfire. This is her remarkable story.

Born on Sept. 7, 1963, in Chandigarh, India, Bhanot moved to Mumbai as a teenager. She had just enrolled at St. Xavier’s College when a photographer saw her on campus and she began modeling for stores like Paville and products like Vaporex.

Raised in the local customs, Bhanot agreed to an arranged marriage that her family had organized. She tied the knot with a man from the United Arab Emirates in March 1985, but discovered that he was abusive shortly afterward. Shirking tradition, she divorced him after two months and decided to become a flight attendant.

With her trained poise and natural looks, Neerja Bhanot was picked out of 10,000 applicants to become a new air hostess for Pan American. At the same time, Palestine’s Abu Nadal terrorist organization grew increasingly hostile towards Israel and its allies, and particularly the United States for supporting the imprisonment of Palestinian rebels.

It was only a year after Neerja Bhanot was first hired by Pan Am that the organization launched its nefarious plot to hijack Pan Am Flight 73, which they planned to reroute to Cyprus and then Israel to free Palestinian prisoners.

As the plane was about to depart from Karachi, Pakistan, shortly before dawn that fateful morning, Bhanot and the passengers were met with deafening gunfire.

It was around 6:00 a.m. when the terrorists crossed the Karachi Airport tarmac in a van with wailing sirens and dressed as Airport security. As they boarded the plane, Bhanot shouted the code for “hijacking” over the intercom while flight attendant Sherene Pavan immediately punched the code in.

This allowed airport officials to take note and keep the aircraft grounded while authorities were called as well as give the pilots a chance to escape. When one of the hijackers opened the door to the cockpit, he was shocked to discover that it was empty.

Karachi’s Pan Am director Viraf Doroga appeared on the tarmac and emptily promised to provide the terrorists with a new pilot within the hour. When no pilot arrived, the hijackers began to single out westerners.

They brought 29-year-old American Rajesh Kumar to one of the plane’s doors and, in full view of the authorities, shot him in the head and dumped his body onto the tarmac. Four hours later, they demanded crew members collect every passenger’s passport.

Bhanot courageously hid any U.S. passports and delegated her colleagues to follow suit, dumping documents in the trash or down toilets. Claiming no Americans were on board, she tended to her passengers by serving them sandwiches and drinks and keeping them calm.

Finally, after 17 harrowing hours, the power on the plane suddenly cut out. Failing to detonate their explosive belts, the gunmen instead fired into the aisles with abandon.

Neerja Bhanot rushed to open one of the emergency exits and help passengers down the slide, and was shot dead while shielding three children.

According to a survivor, Bhanot wasn’t just killed in the crossfire — she was intentionally executed. When one of the hijackers realized that she was protecting passengers, he brutally grabbed Bhanot by her ponytail and shot her point-blank. This account is somewhat debated, however.


All What's You Should Know: Dig into history, fact, science, true crime, and beyond with All What's you should know — where: where you'll discover the most interesting things that you Should know. Feel free to explore our blog

Comments