KATHMANDU: The son of a Polish alpinist who took part in a 1979 expedition to the Himalaya that ended in the tragic death of three climbers is returning to the formidable mountain range.
Maciej Pietrowicz drives 10,000 kilometers from Poland to Nepal in a Jelcz truck to commemorate the golden age of Polish Himalayan climbing and the first winter ascent of Mount Everest.
Maciej, together with his father’s friend Krzysztof Czaplicki, and Arkadiusz Peryga, the driver and mechanic, will use a renovated Jelcz 300 series truck to reach Nepal in 2020.
Their journey will take them through, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, India and finally Nepal –following in the wheel tracks of the trio’s predecessors, one of whom was Maciej’s father, who traveled by Jelcz in the 80s.
Pietrowicz said: “Our main goal is to once again drive a Jelcz truck to Nepal, and in doing so pay tribute to our fellow countrymen who exactly 40 years reached the world’s highest summit in winter.
“One of the conquerors of Everest, Krzysztof Wielicki, is an ambassador of our project,” he added. On February 17, 1980, Wielicki and Leszek Cichy became the first men to climb Mount Everest in the winter. Ten out of 14 peaks over 8,000 meters were summited for the first time in winter by Poles.
Commemorating the “winter warriors”, who braved the Himalaya in the coldest and most dangerous months is only part of the ‘Jelczem w Himalaje’ (‘To the Himalayas by Jelcz’) project.
“In 2019, during our last trip, we visited a shelter established in Kathmandu after the earthquake. We made the journey by plane, with only a few computers in our backpacks,” said Pietrowicz.
“In 2020, we are not going to climb, so we will use our huge cargo space to carry many more gifts for Nepal in connection with the fifth anniversary of the earthquake. It will be a beautiful gesture commemorating the entire journey we have to make. The support we can provide to those in need with this project is an immeasurable and timeless goal in itself.”
Pietrowicz’s motivation comes from one more source, much closer to home. His father Jerzy participated in the 1979 Annapurna South expedition organized by the Sudetes Mountain Club.
“It was only because my father had a leg injury, which separated him from two climbers making for the summit, that survived the expedition,” said Pietrowicz. “His two colleagues who made for the summit were reported missing and never returned.
I was born two years after these events, and since my father passed away when I was seven years old, I learned about it only from his notes on the expedition,” explained Maciej.
His father’s journals from the fateful trip inspired him to delve deeper into the story and engage in initiatives connected to mountaineering. In April, together with his loved ones, Pietrowicz traveled to the Himalaya to find the abandoned base used by the climbers 40 years ago and install a memorial plaque.
Despite all the work that was carried out to renovate the lorry, the globetrotters need to take a full set of spare parts, including a gearbox, with them.
“The past participants of the expeditions had 20 dollars in their pockets when departing due to the political system. They were forced to sell many of the goods they had along the way. In present times it is difficult to implement such ideas,” said Maciej, referring to the difficulties his father had to deal with.
Next year’s trip, although demanding in its own way, will be easier than what the men who inspired it achieved.
In addition to the Jelcz expedition, Pietrowicz plans to self-publish a book about the fateful 1979 expedition in May 2020. ‘Jeszcze tu powrócę’ (‘I will be back’) is Jerzy Pietrowicz’s journal intertwined with reports from his son’s journey 40 years later, with places and sometimes even dates coinciding.
(Agencies)
Comment