About Us How to Help Tilganga Eye Centre Who We Are Where We Work Images Cataracts Publications Videos Links
Search Site Map 
 
   
  Sir Edmund Hillary with Tenzing Norgay Sherpa.
   

Sir Edmund Hillary

Honorary Chairperson Himalayan Cataract Project


Sir Edmund Hillary, 1919-2008

The Himalayan Cataract Project wishes to acknowledge the passing of Sir Edmund Hillary.  He was a great friend to the organization and to the founding directors, serving as an Honorary Chairman to the organization.

Co-Director Dr. Geoff Tabin stated that Hillary’s work as a humanitarian, including both his direct work and the work he inspired in others, was his greatest accomplishment.  Our thoughts are with his family and his many projects.  

According to the Washington Post, Hillary told the Chicago Tribune in 1989 that although so many people identified him with his more extreme treks, "My life is not so much stepping on top of a peak that has never been stepped on before, or traveling to the South Pole, but, rather more, the building of schools and medical clinics for the very worthy people of the Himalayas."


See also

Conquered Everest, Advocated for Planet
Washington Post, January 11, 2008

Sir Edmund Hillary's life
The New Zealand Herald, January 11, 2008


Sir Edmund Hillary, mountain climber and humanitarian, repaid his debt of fame to the Himalayas by inaugurating a program of building schools, clinics, airstrips and bridges in Nepal that, with his still active support, have improved the lives of thousands of people over the four decades since he and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay were the first to stand on top of Mt. Everest. He was also a diplomat who represented his country as New Zealand’s High Commissioner in India, Pakistan, Nepal, and Bhutan. He received the Order of the Garter from the Queen, and today his smiling face appears on the New Zealand five-dollar bill.

A shy, strictly raised country boy who went into the family bee-keeping business in New Zealand, Hillary soon discovered his real love was for exploring the challenging climbing routes in his native Southern Alps. Hillary’s strength on ice and snow commended him to the legendary Eric Shipton, with whom he enjoyed some grueling and at times hair-raising Himalayan forays before being nominated by Shipton for the British 1953 attempt on Everest.

He writes in his book, View from the Summit: “Achievements are important and I have reveled in a number of good adventures, but far more worthwhile are the tasks I have been able to carry out for my friends in the Himalayas. They too have been great challenges in a different way – building mountain airfields and schools, hospitals and clinics, and renewing remote Buddhist monasteries. These are the projects that I will always remember.”

Who We Are
Top of Page Contact Us Site Map Home
© 2005 Himalayan Cataract Project