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Sherpa and the City
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Kalopoolbasi
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Just watched a segment on ABC News about Sherpa community in New York. It turns out that after Nepal and India the largest number of Sherpas are concentrated in New York. It was a very heart touching story. There was a guy who was a taxi driver who hasn't seen his daughter for 10 years now. He hasn't even gone on top of the empire state...he plans to do that with his daughter once they get reunited!

There were also other notable mountain climbers....one guy (I forgot his name, Lopshang Jangbo?) who went on top of the everest in regular clothes with Nepali flag runs a curio shop in canal street now.

I feel proud to belong to the country of brave fighters(gurkhalis) and mountain climbers (sherpas)!

blue_moon
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Here is the News details

Sherpas in the City

Meet New York's Sherpa Cabbies, Who Left One of the Most Remote Places on Earth for One of the Busiest

New York Sherpas
Former Himalayan climbing guide Tsering Norbu Sherpa is part of a growing community of Sherpas who now live and work, driving cabs in New York City. (ABC News)
From World News with Charles Gibson

But when a 10-year civil war scared tourists out of Nepal, a new generation of these hardy porters and guides, members of an Asian ethnic group of Tibetan descent, came down from the mountains.

"I used to drive in Nepal," Tsering Norbu Sherpa, a cab driver and former climbing guide, who came to New York in 1998, told ABC News as he sped down Manhattan's Park Avenue. "But not at this pace and with this many lanes."

Some would consider Tsering mountaineering royalty. He's the grandnephew of Tenzing Norgay, the man who, with Sir Edmund Hillary, was one of the first to conquer the world's highest peak, Mount Everest. In his younger years, Tsering taught at the Himalaya Mountaineering Institute, and climbed up to 18,000 feet.

But now, Tsering is part of a growing community of Sherpas in New York City. Outside of Nepal and India, New York is now home to the largest population of Sherpas in the world, with about 2,5000 Sherpas living in the five boroughs, according to Outside magazine. Many, like Tsering, make their living driving cabs.

"Climbing was in my blood," Tsering said of his past adventures.

But "after getting married and having a kid," he added, "I stopped extreme climbing for my own safety."

Now he navigates the stone and steel canyons of Manhattan, working 12-hour shifts, six nights a week, in a job that severely tests his Buddhist serenity.

"It's crazy, I've seen a lot of weird people," Tsering said from the driver's seat of his yellow cab sedan. "That's why I call this job a good, bad, and ugly job.

"The worst thing," he added, "is people having sex in my car. It's such disrespect."

Christian DeBenedetti, an Outside magazine writer who spent much of this year among New York's Sherpa community, says many Sherpas struggle to adapt to their new home while clinging to their Eastern culture.

But, he added, "even if tens of thousands of people came and climbed those peaks every year, it wouldn't generate the kind of money that Sherpas can make here, working as cab drivers."

Sherpas in New York face other costs. Tsering has a work permit, but worries that if he leaves, he won't be allowed back into the country. Until he receives a green card, he will not be reunited with the 10-year-old daughter he was forced to leave behind in India, 10 years ago.

"There's a saying, 'if you want to achieve something, you have to sacrifice something,'" said Tsering, who keeps a small Buddha statue on the dashboard of his car. "I guess that was part of my sacrifice."

With that sacrifice, Tsering denies himself simple New York pleasures, like the view from the city's tallest skyscraper.

"None of those tourist places, because I'm saving it for my daughter," said Tsering, of never having been to the top of the Empire State Building.

"When she comes," he said, "we'll go as a family."

Kalopoolbasi
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Thanks blue moon.
Samsara
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"Break" Tsering as he used to be popularly known back in Darjeeling (for his reknowned break-dance moves), back in the days, this dai lived in Tenzing Koti and is a member of mountaineering royalty (the grand-nephew of the late Tenzing Norgay himself).  His mother was my local guardian back during my school days and it was always a matter of great food whenever I had the chance to go to his place and then visit Tenzing's residence to see the private museum there inside.  Although with such an esteemed background, this dai is one of the most down to earth fellas I have ever known: A very humble man and also among the most hepful we have here.  BTW, his songs at the various Himalayan and Nepali events in NYC are a treat to watch. 

A great program on TV today and its nice to see Sherpas and other peeps of the Himalayan region being portrayed for what they are: Hard working immigrants here to provide for the family they left behind.  Thanks for the great article, blue moon and kalopoolbasi

MAKURAMANCHE
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HEY THANKS FOR THE WONDERFUL ARTICLE GUYS.... THIS IS THE FIRST TIME I SAW SOMETHING ABOUT NEPALIS LIVING IN NY ON THE NEWS... ANYWAYS FOR OTHERS WHO READ THIS ARTICLE VISIT THIS LINK AND WATCH THE VIDEO...
http://abcnews.go.com/WN/story?id=3943658&page=1
BathroomCoffee
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Yeah I saw that too. It was a nice peice on something positive amongst all the negative news we get about Nepal all the time.


sgy
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Talking about Sherpa and The City, does anybody here know Lhakpa Sherpa?  He is Nuru Lama's uncle (of World Bank).  I understand he and another friend, Prem Subba, are doing some business in New York.  I am their old college buddy from Ascol.  I would very much appreciate it if anyone can help me connect with them.  Thanks.
sgy
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?
sajhakhohero
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2 WORDS TO SUMMARIZE SHERPAS!

GREAT PEOPLE WITH RIGHT ATTITUDES!

 

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