Jamling Tenzing
Jamling was born on April
23, 1965, in Darjeeling, India, the fourth
of six children.
In 1953 Sir Edmund
Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first
men to reach the sacre d summit of Mount
Everest. Retracing his father's historic
footsteps. Jamling Tenzing Norgay summited
Mount Everest in 1996, just two weeks after
nine people died in the mountains most
deadly storm ever recorded.
Not only did Jamling
Tenzing Norgay make it to the top of the
world's most forbidding mountain - described
by the Sherpa people as " The Mother Goddess
of the World" - but he also helped capture
it all on film. As the star of Director
David Breashears Imax film Everest, Jamling
helped to portray not only the physical
challenges of the Mountain, but also the
mental and spiritual challenges faced by the
climbers.
Described as the "
Titanic of Documentaries," Everest has
played to sold out audiences across the
country, capturing for the first time on
large format film the breathtaking view from
Everest's summit. Filmed during the same
spring that nine people on Everest died in a
sudden storm, it depicts the selflessness
exhibited by Jamling and his companions in
risking their own lives to save their fellow
climbers. For his bravery, Jamling received
His Holiness The Dalai Lama's Award, as well
as the National Citizen's award from the
President of India. Jamling is the tenth
person in the Norgay family to stand at the
top of the world.
Jamling released his book
"Touching My Father's Soul" in the spring of
2001 in San Francisco, and it has been
released in 18 languages since then. His
book has reached the 24 spot on the New York
Times Best sellers list, and # 15 in
Germany. It has been nominated for 3 awards
in Canada, London and the U.S.
Today Jamling runs his
adventure travel company "Tenzing Norgay
Adventures"
And now personally guides Treks and Trekking
peaks in Sikkim, Bhutan and Nepal.
When he is not guiding he
travels around the world doing lectures as a
motivational speaker to a variety of Groups,
Corporations and Universities. Sharing his
personal experience about this 1996 Everest
climb, his father's historic climb of 1953
and about the Sherpa culture.
He also continues his
involvement with the "Tenzing Norgay
Climbing Club" that he started in 1997 to
help the kids off the streets.
Jamling is often asked
whether there are more big summits in his
future. " I promised my wife that after
Everest, I would never climb again," says
Norgay." I will not break my word. |