The Asian Age

Climb every mountain

- Francis Gonsalves

Dasharath Manjhi — nicknamed “Mountain Man” — lost his wife on the way to hospital since circumvent­ing a mountain took six hours and they couldn’t reach there on time. Dasharath’s love for his wife made him slog singlehand­edly with hammer and chisel for 22 years to chisel a mountain passage 360- foot- long, 30- footwide and 25- foot- high that has reduced the distance between Atri and Wazirganj of Gaya district from 50 km to 10 km!

While we make mountains out of molehills, determined folks like Dasharath do the opposite; they transform mighty mountains into molehills by demonstrat­ing that no mountain is too high to surmount. Today being “Internatio­nal Mountain Day” with the theme “Mountains Matter”, let’s reflect on mountain- matters from various perspectiv­es.

Mountains make up onequarter of the world’s landscape and are the source of 80 per cent of the world’s fresh water supply. Some two billion people worldwide depend on the food, minerals, timber and hydro- electricit­y from mountain resources. Mountains signify many things in religious traditions. The Bible has over five hundred references to m o u n - t a i n s . First, mountains are symbols of silence, solitude and solidity. Second, they are personifie­d and seen as rejoicing, leaping, praising and pointing out to God. Third, they are sacred sites where we encounter God. Abraham, Moses, Elijah and Jesus are associated with events that occurred on mountains. Sacred among these are Mount Sinai, Mount of Olives and Mount Calvary. The Himalayas have always been a favourite abode of Indian sadhus and seers for their sadhanas.

Your school exams, an imminent job- transfer, an addiction, a dreaded disease, a nagging doubt, the birth of your firstborn or the death of your spouse — all these can seem like mountains, looming large before you: intimidati­ng, yet intriguing; perilous, yet pregnant with promise. After you climb and conquer each of these mountains, you will realise that there’s still another one to climb. World famous mountainee­r, Edmund Hillary said, “It’s not the mountain we conquer, but ourselves.” May we realise that mountains matter. Care for them, climb them, let them challenge you. Francis Gonsalves is a professor of theology. He can

be contacted at fragons@ gmail. com

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