[Congressional Record Volume 149, Number 81 (Wednesday, June 4, 2003)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7377-S7378]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




 HONORING A MOMENT IN HISTORY: FIFTY YEARS SINCE MAN FIRST REACHED THE 
                           ROOF OF THE WORLD

  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, May 29, 2003 marks a true milestone, a 
triumph of the human spirit. On that day, 50 years earlier, two young 
men--Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay--became the first to reach the 
highest point on earth, the fabled summit of Mt. Everest.
  At 29,028 feet above sea level, Everest had defied 15 earlier 
attempts, including the doomed expedition of George Mallory, in 1924.
  Some have called Everest the Third Pole, after the North Pole, first 
reached in 1909, and the South Pole, reached in 1911.
  Small wonder, then, that these two intrepid climbers--the lanky 
beekeeper

[[Page S7378]]

from New Zealand and the sprightly Sherpa born in Tibet--became instant 
celebrities back in 1953, and have since evolved into legendary 
figures.
  The son of a yak herder, Tenzing Norgay, who died in 1986, became the 
first humbly born Asian to rise to global fame entirely through his own 
efforts and sheer willpower. In many ways his story has a strong 
American flavor to it--with enough determination and hard work, anyone 
can achieve anything.
  Norgay spoke 13 languages but could neither read nor write. He always 
told his children: ``I climbed Everest so you wouldn't have to.'' His 
son, Norbu, now a resident of San Francisco, took these words to heart. 
College became his Everest.
  Equally extraordinary is how Hillary and Norgay used their fame not 
for personal gain, but as champions of their people and, later, to help 
and protect the unique culture of the Sherpas.
  For nearly 25 years now, I have been honored to consider Sir Edmund 
Hillary my friend. In September of 1981, he was with my husband when he 
fulfilled a dream: entering the beautiful Kanshung valley, in an 
attempt to climb the east face of Everest from Tibet.
  In concert with the American Himalayan Foundation, Sir Edmund's 
Himalayan Trust, which was established in 1962, has been leading the 
effort to build schools, bridges, hospitals, and micro hydro plants, 
out of his deep and lasting affection for the Sherpa people.
  To date, they have built 27 schools where once there were none. I am 
not talking about just funding alone--Sir Edmund actually took part in 
the actual construction of these and other buildings. Here is a man who 
puts the divots back. Just ask the Sherpa children who grew up tending 
yaks who are now doctors, pilots and investment bankers.
  The Himalayan Trust has also built two hospitals, one in Khunde and 
one in Paphlu, and 11 village clinics that provide health care for the 
Sherpa communities and trekkers alike.
  The Trust has worked to combat the deforestation of the Khumbu, 
caused largely by tourism, by planting more than 1 million trees, to 
restore the sacred monasteries at Tengbouche and Thame--central sites 
for the spirituality of the Sherpas, and in the establishment, in 1976, 
of the Sagarmatha National Park. Sagarmatha is the Nepali name for 
Mount Everest.
  At 83 years old, New Zealand's former High Commissioner to India is 
still going strong. For half a century now he has been one of the 
enduring figures of our time.
  He has taught me and so many others about the simple yet majestic 
power of the Himalayas and the marvelous but far too often forgotten 
people whose ancient culture is tied so closely to those amazing 
mountains.
  Being the first to reach the top of the world would ensure anyone's 
name in the history books--and Hillary and Norgay achieved that the 
moment news spread of their heroic accomplishment.
  But I believe had they not been the men they were--soft spoken and 
down to earth, devoted to actions and example, to helping others rather 
than themselves--then they would have ended up as mere footnotes.
  Instead, the names of Hillary and Norgay remain an inspiration to 
people around the world. And I am absolutely certain that the same will 
be true 50 years from now, when it comes time to celebrate the 100th 
anniversary, and for many other anniversaries to follow.

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