Hello 

Create Profile

Creating your profile will enable you to submit photos and stories to get published on News24.


Please provide a username for your profile page:

This username must be unique, cannot be edited and will be used in the URL to your profile page across the entire 24.com network.

Settings

Location Settings

News24 allows you to edit the display of certain components based on a location. If you wish to personalise the page based on your preferences, please select a location for each component and click "Submit" in order for the changes to take affect.









Facebook Sign-In

Hi News addict,

Join the News24 Community to be involved in breaking the news.

Log in with Facebook to comment and personalise news, weather and listings.

 
 

50 years after Everest conquest

2003-05-29 13:32
line

Auckland - There is that single Mount Everest image everybody knows; Sherpa Tenzing Norgay, left foot forward and holding an ice pick with four flags attached, standing atop the world's highest peak on May 29, 1953.

Edmund Hillary took the photo but there is no picture of him on the summit.

There is, however, another photo that sums up the man.

Taken in 1961 it shows a 15-year-old Nepalese boy holding a scroll of paper reaching to the ground, on which are the names of 60 children asking for a school in their village of Thami. Towering over him, hands on hips, is Hillary.

His Himalayan Trust has built 27 schools, two hospitals and about a dozen medical clinics using, said Hillary, "practical skills and plenty of number eight wire".

In an interview earlier this year, the 83-year-old Hillary, the one-time beekeeper who celebrates being "an ordinary bloke", was passionate about fairness.

People in places like Nepal, he said, no more asked to live in poverty than New Zealanders were responsible for their affluence.

Life-changing

"The fact that we do is a blessing, and with it comes responsibilities," he said.

Since summiting Everest at 11:30 that day there have been thousands of interviews and books.

Finding something new to say about it is all but impossible for a man so accessible he is in the Auckland phone book: "Hillary Sir Edmund 278A Remuera Rd..."

He was born Edmund Percival Hillary on July 20, 1919, the son of a Great War veteran wounded at Gallipoli. During World War II Ed and brother Rex became conscientious objectors.

Rex was locked up for the war and Ed changed his mind and joined the air force operating out of Fiji on Catalinas.

After the war Hillary began mountaineering, falling in with Harry Ayres who became his mentor.

While climbing the Southern Alps Hillary decided he and some friends, including George Lowe, should try the Himalayas which they did, winning attention from the international climbing community.

English soldier John Hunt in 1953 put together an expedition to scale Everest, recruiting the world's best climbers for the attempt to tackle the 8 848 metre peak.

Lowe was at the highest camp when Hillary and Norgay arrived back from the summit. They looked a little tired, he said.

'Tremendous honour'

"Ed unclipped his mask and grinned a tired greeting, sat on the ice and said in his matter-of-fact way: 'Well, we knocked the bastard off!'"

The conquest coincided with the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II who promptly knighted Hillary, leaving him aghast.

"It was a tremendous honour, of course, but I had never really approved of titles and couldn't really imagine myself possessing one," he wrote.

In 1957-58 he joined the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition led by Vivian Fuchs. Hillary and close friend Peter Mulgrew sparked controversy by racing the New Zealand team, against Fuchs' orders, to the South Pole first.

The Himalayan Trust was family duty and on March 31, 1975, Ed's wife, Louise, and daughter Belinda died in a plane crash in Nepal flying to a project.

Affection for India was sealed with a 1977 jet-boat expedition, including son Peter, from the Ganges River mouth to the Himalayas.

Tens of thousands of people greeted him prompting an Indian reporter to ask if he knew that he was being seen as god. Replied Hillary: "Well I know I'm not, so it doesn't bother me."

In 1984 Hillary became New Zealand's envoy to India and Nepal taking with him an "official companion" - June, the widow of Peter Mulgrew, who died in a 1979 Antarctic plane crash. June and Ed are now married.

Being accessible Hillary often gets asked his opinion, even now about climbing. He is mostly forgiving of modern climbing.

He has almost never been seen angry in public but did so in 1999 when an American expedition found the body of celebrated English climber George Mallory who disappeared near the peak in 1924. He was outraged they released a photo of the body, saying it was an "unpleasant and unkindly thing to do".

If it could be proven that Mallory got to the peak first, Hillary said he would be perfectly happy: "For 45 years now it's been accepted that I was first to reach the summit so I couldn't complain too much."

inside news24

 
1 of 10

140
1

Latest comment in Sci-Tech

marius.dumas says... I don't need peer review from people in the same school of though as I am to know that wikipedia, academics from universities and authors of science books have reasonably acceptable level of information. Read the article...

 
Traffic
Lottery
 
  • Friday Carletonville - 10:01 AM
    Road name: N14
    ROAD CLOSED due to a large sink-hole between the two Carletonville exits - traffic is diverted onto a local bypass route
  • Sunday Volksrust - 07:33 AM
    Road name: N11 Both Ways
    Stop / go controls for construction works at Majuba Pass - expect delays between Volksrust and Newcastle
  • Monday Centurion - 15:41 PM
    Road name: Jean Avenue
    ROAD CLOSED between Rabie Street and Gerhard Street for sink hole repair works
 
More traffic reports...
 

Jobs [change area]

Customer Engineer

Newcastle, South Africa
CEB Maintenance Africa (Pty) Ltd
R5000 - R8000

IT Security Consultant.

Gauteng Other
EOH Recruitment Solutions
R450000 - R600000

Front End Web Designer/Developer

Centurion, South Africa
Hutech International Group
R20000 - R26000

Cars[change area]

LAND ROVER

Discovery 3 2.7 TDV6 SE 4x4 Dsl AT
2006
R 399,900.00

OPEL

Astra 1.4T Enjoy 5-dr MY10
2011
R 209,995.00

OPEL

Corsa 1.4 Club Utility MY08 PU
2008
R 89,900.00

Property [change area]

Travel - Look, Book, Go!

Romance at the President

Spend two nights at the Protea Hotel President in Cape Town from R2601 per person sharing. Includes return flights, taxes, car hire and accommodation. Book Now!

Kalahari.com - shop online today

The Big Mama Sale

The Big Mama Sale is now on. Get up to 80% off Books, Music, DVDs, Games, Electronics, Toys & Gifts. Shop now.

Electronics on Sale

Up to 80% off electronics + 24hr delivery. Shop now.

50% Off Educo toys

Join the Big Mama Sale madness at kalahari.com and get 50% off all Educo toys for your kids. Terms and conditions apply. Shop now.

Books on Sale

Up to 80% off books & 1000s Of books to choose from. First come, first served. While stocks last. Shop now.

Blu-ray special offer

Buy 10 blu-rays and get a free Sony blu-ray player. Offer valid while stocks last. Shop now.

OLX Free Classifieds [change area]

Drain & Pipe Inspection System

For Sale, Garage Sale in South Africa, Gauteng, Johannesburg. Date January 21

2011 Mazda 2 1.5 Dynamic

Vehicles, Cars in South Africa, Gauteng, Johannesburg. Date January 22

Estimator

Jobs, Engineering Jobs - Architecture Jobs in South Africa, Gauteng, Johannesburg. Date January 21

Apple iPhone 4S 16GB

Dual-core A5 chip. The most powerful iPhone ever. Two cores in the...

From R7199.00

I'm shopping for:

A local community where you can meet people, upload photos, videos and loads more...
There are new stories on the homepage. Click here to see them.