Photo: Courtesy of Netflix

The nightmare that upended Jesse Langford’s life on Dec. 9, 2019, began with an explosion that he says sounded a lot like “fireworks.”
A 19-year-old college student at the time, Jesse was on a 16-day cruise with his family, who lived in Sydney, Australia, when they decided to take a sightseeing day trip to Whakaari Island (also known as White Island), an 800-acre cone volcano located 30 miles off the coast of New Zealand’s North Island.
“We all turned around to look at it,” Langford — whose heartbreaking ordeal is chronicled in the new Netflix documentaryThe Volcano: Rescue from Whakaari, streaming Friday — tells PEOPLE in an exclusive interview. “As scary and as daunting as it was, it was quite a beautiful sight … at least until things got really dangerous.”
Within seconds, Langford remembers feeling the ground shudder, a blast of intense heat hit his face and a surge of adrenaline pulse through his body.
“That’s when it suddenly became real and frightening,” says Langford. “Boulders the size of people were flying through the air all around us and everything started going black.”
When the tour guide yelled, “run,” the family began sprinting over the rocky terrain, heading in what they believed was the direction of the beach through black smoke and scalding-hot steam. Realizing he couldn’t outrun the deadly blast, Langford spotted a large mound and decided to take shelter behind it.
Courtesy of Netflix

After what felt like an eternity, the smoke dissipated slightly and Langford stumbled back to where his shell-shocked parents and several others in their group were sitting on the ground. His mother wasn’t moving, and his father told him he could barely breathe.
All around him people — who moments earlier were laughing and snapping photographs of the island that resembled an alien planet — were screaming in agony.
Covered with countless cuts and gashes, Langford remembers “just sitting there and rocking back and forth” before realizing that if he didn’t force himself to start moving, he and others who might still be alive would soon be dead from their injuries.

“I could feel my burnt skin starting to tighten up,” he says. “So I told myself, ‘If this is the last thing I’m gonna do, I can’t sit here. I’ve got to suck it up and try my best to walk and find help.’ "
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Along the way he ran into one of the tour guides, who wasn’t as close to the eruption as he had been, and begged him to return with him to the spot where he’d left the others. But the man, sensing the seriousness of Langford’s injuries, insisted on leading him to an awaiting boat that eventually took him back to the mainland.
“I’ve never been in so much pain,” recalls Langford, who suffered burns over 70 percent of his body that required 18 surgeries and kept him in the hospital — where he later watched a live stream of the funerals for his parents and sister — for three months.

He still marvels over the heroics of the volunteer helicopter crews who risked their lives rescuing 12 people from the island, including his father.
“He actually made it to the hospital before succumbing to his injuries,” he says of his dad.
Of the 21 people in his group, only three survived. His sister’s body was never found and is believed to have been swept out to sea after a massive storm hit the island not long after the eruption.

He’s also become a mentor for theSHARE Burns Peer Support Program, helping others recovering from severe burns at the same hospital where he was treated after the eruption on Whakaari Island.
“I’ve spent the past three years focused on rebuilding myself to be stronger, completing my degree and moving on in life,” says Langford, who will begin working as a nurse in an intensive care unit in the coming months. “Sitting around and feeling sorry for myself isn’t going to get me anywhere or benefit anyone.”
The Volcano: Rescue from Whakaari— from directorRory Kennedyand executive producersLeonardo DiCaprio,Ron Howardand Brian Grazer — premieres on Netflix Dec. 16.
source: people.com