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 the-south-asian.com July / August 2006  | 
    
       
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 August/September Contents 
		 Sufis 
		- wisdom against  50 
		years of mountain  Heritage cities: 
		Cotton - the fibre of   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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     Page  
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	50 years of Climbing – 
	Everest, K2, & Nanga Parbat by Salman Minhas 
	First published January 2004 
 Mt. Everest & the Sherpas 
	: Chomolungma [8,848 
	meters, 29,035 feet] Some 50 
	years ago Everest [60 million years old] was ascended on May 29, 1953 by 
	Tenzing Norgay of India/Nepal and Edmund Hillary of New Zealand whose first 
	words on greeting 
	his compatriot George Lowe were: "Well George, we’ve knocked the bastard 
	off?".  
	Later, Hillary would
	explain 
	apologetically that this was an idiomatic expression that for him Mount 
	Everest was the final frontier for human endurance; he uttered the first 
	thing that came to his mind. "I was like an excited bowler who gets the 
	wicket of a prized batsman." Today 
	Sir Ed Hillary, 83-year old Burrah Sahib (big/tall man), as he is 
	known, has left his legacy of humanitarian work for the Sherpas. In 1960, he 
	started the Himalayan Trust, a philanthropic organization which collects 
	donations for projects in the Sherpa country of
	Nepal. It has 
	built schools, hospitals, an airstrip, helped poor families, and trained 
	local teachers. It was responsible in the start of Sagarmatha National Park 
	in the 1970s. Thus with Hillary’s efforts, the Sherpas today are 
	participating in a planned modernization. Most importantly they have 
	received education to carve out their own destiny. A 620 kW hydropower plant 
	serving the villages of the Mount Everest area, with aid from the Austrians, 
	has played a tremendous role in improving both living conditions and 
	environmental protection in the valleys in the shadow of the 8000m peaks. 
	Snow Tiger or Native: 
	The Sherpa Tenzing Norgay [1914-1986] 
	Basically a Yak–herder, 
	Norgay’s name at birth was Namgyal Wangdi. A holy man renamed him "Norgay", 
	which means "fortunate". Tenzing means “tiger of the snow”. In 1935 
	he married Dawa Phuti, a Sherpa girl living in Darjeeling, before the first 
	expedition to Everest.  
	During WW-II, Everest 
	expeditions became scarce, but Tenzing continued to climb in other places. 
	He successfully climbed Nanda Devi, Tirich Mir and Nanga Parbat [9th highest 
	in the world but considered the most difficult along with K2]. Dawa Phuti 
	died in 1944; he remarried a year later, to Ang Lahmu, another Sherpa. In 
	1948, he guided Tibetologist Guiseppe Tucci on archaeological investigations 
	in Tibet. 
	Eventually Tenzing was 
	selected, 1935 onwards, in about 7 Everest expeditions, with success in 
	1953.  
	With Raymond Lambert of 
	the 1952 Swiss expedition, Tenzing had come within 1,000 feet of the summit.
	"For in my 
	heart," he once said, "I needed to go . . . the pull of Everest was stronger 
	for me than any force on earth." 
	Tenzing's 1955 
	autobiography, written with the help of James Ullman, Tiger 
	of the Snow contains his simple first hand accounts of his 
	Everest ascent. 
	A simple man, Tenzing 
	said after climbing Everest: “It 
	has been a long road...From a mountain coolie, a bearer of loads, to a 
	wearer of a coat with rows of medals who is carried about in planes and 
	worries about income tax. ….I had climbed my mountain, but I must still live 
	my life……….." 
	Tenzing assumed a 
	Buddhist attitude on the way he was treated by the British expeditions.
	 [See 
	also “Servant of Sahibs: The Rare 19th Century Travel Account as Told by a 
	Native of Ladakh” - 
	by
	
	Rassul Galwan,
	
	Francis Younghusband ] 
	Tenzing’s account of 
	what he did at the summit is moving in its simplicity and humility. Tenzing was no lightweight mountaineer. He was a veritable combination of Mohammed Ali – the boxer, Pele-the soccer king, Jehangir Khan- the unsquashable, and Michael Jordan-the basketball king. The Champion of mountain climbing, but without the slick gift of the Ali gab; in fact very much the opposite. He was a giant of a man having climbed and traveled in Chitral, Kashmir, Garhwal, and Tibet. Therefore his being on top of Everest was not an accident in 1953. Tenzing 
	was given the 
	George Medal, the 
	greatest honor that can be given to a non-citizen of the United Kingdom. The 
	Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru became his friend. Hundreds of 
	adoring Hindus thought Tenzing was a living embodiment of Lord Shiva. 
	Tenzing’s home became a pilgrimage site for Nepalese, Hindus and 
	oppressed Tibetans. In 1964, Ang Lhamu died and Tenzing married Daku, a Darjeeling girl whose family came from his home village in Nepal. One of their three sons, Jamling, was to follow his father's footsteps to the top of Mt. Everest in 1996. 
	  
	  
	James Ramsay Ullman, 
	co-author of Tenzing’s biography –Tiger of Snow wrote at Tenzing’s death: 
	 "Tenzing is a 
	manifestation of godhead: an avatar of the Lord Siva, a reincarnation 
	of the Buddha. For still other millions, too sophisticated to confuse man 
	with deity, he is a mortal figure of supreme significance. Symbolically as 
	well as literally, Tenzing on Everest was a man against the sky, virtually 
	the first humbly born Asian in all history to attain world stature and world 
	renown. And for other Asians his feat was not the mere climbing of a 
	mountain, but a bright portent for themselves and for the future of their 
	world." Tenzing 
	Norgay died suddenly on May 9, 1986 whilst his son Jamling [born in 
	Darjeeling on 
	April 23, 1965, the 
	fourth of six Norgay children] 
	was in a US “Northland College”, Wisconsin which had also honored Tenzing 
	with an honorary degree. 
	Jamling had 2 brothers 
	and attended St. Paul's, an elite boarding school in India. Tenzing forbade 
	Jamling to climb the Everest much against the son’s desire to do so. Tenzing 
	explained “I climbed Everest so that you wouldn't have to." Jamling, upon 
	graduating from St. Paul's, traveled to the United States to attend College 
	in Wisconsin. He spent about 10 years in USA but dreamed on climbing 
	Everest, finally making the famous 1996 IMAX movie on Everest. 
	During the making 
	of this film, there was an avalanche and Jamling’s skepticism about his 
	Buddhist faith also got buried in the avalanche somewhere. In that spring, 
	nine 
	people on Everest died in a sudden storm. Selflessly Jamling Norgay and his 
	climbers risked their own lives to save their fellow climbers. For this 
	bravery, Jamling Norgay received His Holiness the Dalai Lama's Award, and 
	the National Citizen's award from the President of India.
	Jamling followed 
	the actions and dignified the summit in honor of his father by depositing a 
	small 
	valuable item of his daughter. He now lives in Darjeeling, India with his 
	family. Jamling’s brothers and sister work in USA. For the 
	interested reader, there are two books written by the Norgay family. There 
	is Tenzing’s son Jamling Norgay, 
	
	Touching My Father's Soul: a Sherpa's Journey to 
	the Top of Everest [based on the IMAX experience]: "My 
	father knew before he ever set foot on the mountain that it had to be 
	approached with respect and with love, the way a child climbs into the lap 
	of its mother. Anyone who attacks the peak with aggression, like a soldier 
	doing battle, will lose." 
	Jamling’s son Tashi is married to an Australian. Tashi’s book 
	
	Tenzing Norgay and the 
	Sherpas of Everest
	
	by
	
	Tashi Tenzing,
	
	Judy Tenzing,
	
	Edmund Hillary 
	is a first hand account 
	of his grandfather’s first Everest ascent. 
	In addition there is a 1954 autobiography of Ang Tharkay,  
	
	Mémoires d'un Sherpa. Ang Tharkay 
	was Tenzing’s landlord in Darjeeling and also his mentor. He accompanied
	
	
	Shipton  on eight expeditions 
	and was also a sirdar [leader] on the 1950 French expedition to
	
	Annapurna, led by
	
	Herzog.  .As Bill Buxton writes about Tenzing in his extensive Mountain Climbing site [see this excellent Magnus-opus site: [http://www.billbuxton.com/climbing.html#everestww.billbuxton.com ] “He had been to Everest 6 times before: to the North Side in 1935 with Shipton, 1936 with Ruttledge and 1938 with Tilman; and to the South Side in the spring of 1952 with Swiss team led by Wyss-Dunant, and back again in the autumn on their second attempt led by Chevalle… As Ortner points out, virtually all of our history of Himalayan mountaineering comes from the westerners, since they were the ones with the skills and means to write the books. From the earlier period, there are only three accounts "from the other side," this one by Tenzing, that by Ang Tharkay, and finally the remarkable Servant of Sahibs, written in 1923 by Ghulam Rassul Galwan, who had worked for Younghusband, among others. Due to their scarcity, insights, and perspective, these books make fascinating reading. “Tenzing 
	simply says that others have written extensively about it, so there is no 
	need to cover the details of the expedition, other than to shed light on 
	things that have been neglected.  What he does do, which Hunt (perhaps 
	understandably) does not, is discuss not only the issues of conflict between 
	the Sherpa and "Sahibs", but also the repercussions (since many of these 
	caused much controversy under the spotlight that fell on the expedition 
	after its success.)  He also talks a lot about the impact of the whole thing 
	on his life, which was significant, given the attention given to the 
	expedition... Finally, one cannot read this book without being touched by 
	the love that he had for the mountains, and the bond that he shared with 
	those of similar spirit (not the least of whom was Lambert, of the 1952 
	Swiss team, with whom - despite a language barrier - he clearly had an 
	outstanding bond.)  In this there are strong echoes of
	
	Rébuffat's fellowship of the rope.  For 
	me, this spirit extended beyond the printed page, bonding author to reader.” 
	Incidentally the 
	youngest Everest climber is also a Sherpa, fifteen-year old Temba Tsheri 
	Sherpa, a schoolboy from the Rolwaling valley. 
	  
	  
	The great successes of 
	Sherpas in 2000 mountaineering were: Lhakpa Sherpa and Pemba Doma as second 
	and third Sherpa woman reach the top of Chomolungma; Appa Sherpa conquers 
	the mountain for the 11th time. On the Golden Jubilee of Mt. Everest the great Sherpas established more speed records. In May 2003, the Golden anniversary of the day, when Tenzing and Hillary first climbed Chomolungma, was crowned by several heroic successes of Sherpa mountaineers. Lhakpa Sherpa became the first woman to reach the summit for a third time (May 22). She was accompanied by her brother and her 15-year-old sister Mingma Kipa Sherpa, who thus becomes the youngest ever person on Chomolungma. Appa Sherpa reached the summit for an unbelievable 13th time (May 26). 
	Late Babu Chhiri's speed 
	record is broken twice within only three days: First, Pemba Dorji Sherpa 
	reaches the summit after 12 hours and 45 minutes (May 23); then, Lhakpa Gelu 
	Sherpa improves this record to 10 hours and 56 minutes (May 26). 
	On July 3, 1953 it was 
	Nanga Parbat [8,125 meters] that was ascended by Hermann Buhl from 
	Germany. Buhl’s comments on climbing the most difficult mountain are more 
	evolved 
	--"Mountains have a way of dealing with overconfidence." 
	   
	Almost half a century of 
	attempts on the Everest, by names such as the British climbers Irvine and 
	Mallory [famous for his British understatement "Because it is there..." 
	  - George 
	Mallory (1886-1924), in an answer to the question 'Why do you want to climb
	
	Mt. 
	Everest?”], have given us a rich insight into mountaineers.  Mallory 
	comments on the activity of mountain climbing are interesting: 
	"The first question which 
	you will ask and which I must try to answer is this, 'What is the use of 
	climbing Mount Everest ?' and my answer must at once be, 'It is no use'. Tenzing was Indian by domicile. 
	  
 
	  Nanga Parbat - the Killer Mountain K2 - the most difficult mountain to climb Women on Nanga Parbat, K2, and Mt.Everest Pakistan's Hunza and Balti climbers Ecological Nightmare on Big Tops & Conclusion 
 
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