Finally, the Top of the World
A witness to the first ascent of Mount Everest 50 years ago this month recalls Edmund Hillary's aplomb, Tenzing Norgay's grace and other glories of the "last earthly adventure"
- By Jan Morris
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2003, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
They call him Burra Sahib—big in stature, big in heart—and they have it just right. Yes, he has had lucrative endorsement gigs with Sears, Rolex and now Toyota (and has led expeditions to the South Pole and the source of the Ganges). But 6-foot-2 Edmund Hillary has mostly devoted himself to the Sherpas, a Tibetan word for the roughly 120,000 indigenous people of mountainous eastern Nepal and Sikkim, India, since he and Tenzing Norgay, the most famous Sherpa of all, summated Mount Everest 50 years ago. “I’ve reveled in great adventures,” Sir Edmund, 83, says from his home in Auckland, New Zealand, “but the projects with my friends in the Himalayas have been the most worthwhile, the ones I’ll always remember.”
Hillary and the Himalayan Trust, which he founded in 1961, have helped the Sherpas build 26 schools, two hospitals, a dozen clinics, as well as water systems and bridges. He also helped Nepal establish SagarmathaNational Park to protect the very wilderness that his ascent has turned into the ultimate trekking and climbing destination, attracting 30,000 people a year.
His love of the area is tinged with sadness. In 1975, Hillary’s wife and youngest daughter were killed in a plane crash while flying to one of the hospitals. “The only way I could really have any ease of mind,” he now recalls, “was to go ahead with the projects that I’d been doing with them.” (A grown son and daughter survive; he remarried in 1989.)
History’s most acclaimed living mountaineer grew up in rural New Zealand too “weedy,” he says, for sports. But heavy labor in the family beekeeping business after high school bulked him up for his new passion—climbing. Impressive ascents in New Zealand and the Himalayas earned him a spot on the 1953 Everest expedition. Hillary was knighted in 1953, and he graces New Zealand’s $5 note and the stamps of several nations. Yet he works hard to debunk his heroic image. “I’m just an average bloke,” he says, albeit with “a lot of determination.”
It’s of a piece with Hillary’s modesty that he would rather talk about his partner Tenzing, a former yak herder who died 17 years ago. “At first he could not read or write, but he dictated several books and became a world ambassador for his people.” What Hillary admires about the Sherpas, he adds, is their “hardiness, cheerfulness and freedom from our civilized curse of self-pity.”
To hear him tell it, climbers are ruining Everest. Since 1953, 10,000 have attempted ascents: nearly 2,000 have succeeded and nearly 200 have died. Hillary concedes that Nepal, a very poor country, benefits from the permit fees—$70,000 per expedition—that climbers pay the government. Still, he has lobbied officials to limit the traffic. “There are far too many expeditions,” he says. “The mountain is covered with 60 to 70 aluminum ladders, thousands of feet of fixed rope and footprints virtually all the way up.”
Hillary plans to celebrate the golden anniversary of the first ascent in Kathmandu, he says, with “the most warmhearted people I know.”
—BRUCE HATHAWAY
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Comments (1)
Your readers ought to look at the remarkable career of Jan Morris (nee James Morris). Author of several outstanding historical studies and well-respected lecturer. May I recommend HEAVEN'S COMMAND, James Morris, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1973. Wonderful reading as the first of a three-volume study of British imperialism. Tom Sloss Ftn.Valley CA
Posted by tom sloss on February 24,2008 | 04:53 PM
Dear Sir Ed, May you enjoy the freedom of breathing the high altitude air once again as your spirit wanders the mountains that gave you pleasure and fame. As well as countless others that benefited from your boundless gifts and efforts. Enjoy the view from up high Gwladys Evans
Posted by Gwladys on January 19,2008 | 03:36 AM
As a young a boy, I remember my mother lifting me up and sitting me on the kitchen table awaiting the news to come through the radio from the Prime Minister of New Zealand saying that Hillary had scaled Everest. Now that I am older I count myself lucky to have been alive in his era. A finer example of a real Kiwi, a person could ever wish for. Paul Evans
Posted by Paul Evans on January 19,2008 | 03:29 AM