|
WELLINGTON - New
Zealand on Monday began celebrations to mark half a century since the conquest
of Mount Everest, the world's highest peak, by the man seen as the South Pacific
country's greatest living hero. Sir Edmund Hillary,
together with Nepalese Sherpa Tenzing Norgay, became the first to scale the
8,850 metre (29,040 foot) summit of Mount Everest on May 29, 1953.
With full military band, mountain climbers, and
colourfully-dressed Nepalese and Indians, Hillary rode an open-topped car
through the capital Wellington cheered by hundreds wanting to see the tall,
self-effacing "ordinary bloke".
Nepal-born Uddab Neupane, 33, cried as he shook Hillary's hand
at a ceremony watched by about a thousand people in the grounds of New Zealand's
Parliament.
"I am too happy today," he said. "Everyone loves him in
Nepal," he said.
Most of Hillary's energy over the
past 50 years has been devoted to helping Nepal's Sherpa people who live in the
shadow of Everest.
His Himalaya Trust raises money and he has personally helped
build 27 schools, two hospitals, 12 medical centres, bridges, pipelines and an
airfield.
Prime Minister Helen Clark, who holidays climbing mountains,
said Hillary's achievement had left a big impact on New Zealand's 3.9 million
people.
"This public occasion ... starts off a
few weeks and months of many celebrations right around the world in
honour of you," Clark said.
She said New Zealanders would be encouraged to assemble at
high parts in the mountainous country on May 29 for organised events on what
would be known as Summit Day.
They would be asked to donate NZ$5 ($2.8) - the banknote which
is printed with Hillary's picture - to a charity bearing Hillary's name.
Many Kiwis believed the former beekeeper's earthy directness
and dry humour epitomised the best in their
countrymen.
"I like to think that I am a very ordinary New Zealander, not
too overly bright perhaps, but determined and practical in what I do," he said.
Stooped and wearing a hearing aid, Hillary, born in 1919, said
he was getting too old and decrepit to continue his charity work but wanted
others to continue.
Hillary's climb won huge media coverage, with news of the
"British" triumph coinciding with the coronation day
of Britain's Queen Elizabeth.
After Everest, Hillary led a number of expeditions. In 1958,
he and four companions travelled overland in three modified tractors to become
the first to reach the South Pole by vehicle.
In the 1960s he returned to the Himalayas in search of the
elusive Yeti and in 1975 he led a jetboat expedition to the source of the
Ganges. - Reuters
|