The Mercury News

Ang Rita, who conquered Everest 10 times, dies at 72

- By Bhadra Sharma

KATHMANDU, NEPAL >> Ang Rita Sherpa, who earned global fame by climbing the world’s highest mountain, Mount Everest, 10 times without the use of supplement­al oxygen, died on Monday at his daughter’s house in Kathmandu. He was 72.

His death was confirmed by his family and by Nepal’s mountainee­ring associatio­ns. No cause was specified, but he had been suffering in recent years from multiple lung and brain ailments that colleagues say could have developed from his years of climbing high altitudes without bottled oxygen.

Most climbers use supplement­al oxygen when ascending peaks higher than 8,000 meters, an altitude mountainee­rs call the “death zone” because the air is so thin that the human body begins to shut down. Early in his career as a porter, and later as a mountain guide, Ang Rita noticed that he never felt the need for supplement­al oxygen, even as he carried bottles of it for other mountainee­rs. He didn’t use it during his first ascent of Everest in 1983 or on his subsequent nine ascents, the last of which was in 1996.

In his only winter expedition on Everest, in 198788, he and a Korean climber lost their way just below the summit in bad weather conditions and spent the whole night doing aerobic exercises to stay warm.

Ang Rita holds the Guinness World Record for most climbs of Everest without bottled oxygen, a record that remains unequaled. ( Another Sherpa, Kami Rita, holds the record for most total ascents of Everest, having done it 24 times, but he was known to use bottled oxygen.)

The Nepalese government honored Ang Rita with several awards, most notably the Order of Tri Shakti Patta First Class in 1990.

“His demise is an irreparabl­e loss to the country’s climbing industry,” President Bidya Devi Bhandari of Nepal wrote on Twitter.

Ang Rita Sherpa was born in 1948 in Yillajung, a tiny village near Thame in the Everest region of Nepal. His mother, Chhokki Sherpa, and his father, Aayala Sherpa, were farmers. Ang Rita never received a formal education (no school was establishe­d in the Everest region until 1961, when Edmund Hillary, the first mountainee­r to reach the summit of Everest, built one in Khumjung). He learned the Nepali alphabet on his own and could barely write his name.

He is survived by his daughter, Dolma, his two sons, Tshewang Dorje and Furunuru, and eight grandchild­ren. Another son, Karsang Namgyal Sherpa, who also became a mountain guide, died in 2012 after an Everest expedition.

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