Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Junko Tabei, first woman to climb Everest, dies

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The first woman to climb Mount Everest didn’t stop there.

Japanese mountainee­r Junko Tabei, who died on Thursday at 77, devoted her adult life to scaling peaks, climbing the tallest mountains in more than 70 countries.

Her philosophy was to live life to the fullest. “I want to climb even more mountains,” she said in a 1991 interview with The AP, 16 years after conquering Everest. “To think, ‘It was great,’ and then die.”

To do so required defying stereotype­s, and a supportive husband, in a country that thought a woman’s place was in the home. She founded the Ladies Climbing Club in 1969 with the slogan “Let’s go on an overseas expedition by ourselves,” and reached the summit of Everest on May 16, 1975, as the leader of the climbing party of an all-female Japanese team.

“Most Japanese men of my generation would expect the woman to stay at home and clean house,” the mother of two said in the 1991 interview.

In 1992, she became the first woman to complete the “Seven Summits,” reaching the highest peaks of the seven continents. Tabei died of cancer at a hospital outside of Tokyo, Japanese media reported on Saturday.

She was born in 1939 in Miharu, a hilly farming town in Fukushima prefecture about 230 km north of Tokyo. Her first summit was nearby Mount Nasu with her teacher in the fourth grade.

Later in life, she became concerned about the degradatio­n of Everest, completing master’s studies in 2000 at Kyushu University in southern Japan on the garbage problem as the famous mountain was opened to more climbers.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Junko Tabei reached the summit of Everest on May 16, 1975.
AP FILE Junko Tabei reached the summit of Everest on May 16, 1975.

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