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Published 29 Aug, 2014 06:25am

Of women, mountains, equality and success

KARACHI: A woman can do just about anything a man can, all she requires is ‘opportunity’, said 22-year-old Samina Baig, speaking at the jam packed Aga Khan University Hospital’s gymnasium, with her talk aptly titled ‘No Mountain Too High, Nor Too Easy’.

Baig is the first Pakistani woman and the third Pakistani after ace mountaineer Nazir Sabir and Hassan Sadpara, to hoist the green flag on the mighty Everest, the world’s tallest mountain.

Apart from being an Everest summiteer, Baig also has a personnel best record – she is the only Pakistani to have stepped on the highest points of all seven continents, a feat that is unlikely to be beaten anytime soon.

Know more: http: Samina Baig becomes first Pakistani woman to conquer seven highest peaks

Baig’s journey to fame and glory has not been an easy one, but in her case her biggest opportunity came in the form of her older brother Mirza Ali Baig, the man who trained her and set her on a path, often considered a man’s domain, where sky is the limit.

“The place where I am from, it has no electricity, no telephones and no internet,” she said, as the audience, a vibrant mix of school students, young doctors and other professionals, sat awestruck.

Recalling how she was fascinated by the mountain stories and climbing adventures her brother shared, her voice filled with admiration every time she mentions Mirza.

But to her climbing has become more than a physical act as she understood her brother’s vision and eventually shared it.

“Our aim is to motivate women all over Pakistan and tell them that if a woman can climb a mountain, she can do anything,” Baig stressed.

It worth noting that the brother-sister duo are the third most popular siblings in the country, following Quaid-a-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah and his sister Fatima Jinnah and late pop-star Nazia Hassan and her brother Zoheb.

After her brief talk, over brother took over the podium space and went on to chart the journey of the two siblings which began from the remote Shimshal village in the Gilgit-Baltistan region.

Though Mirza had been instrumental in Samina’s Everest feat, he was unable to reach the summit due to health issues but encouraged Samina to finish her climb.

“Mountaineering is a metaphor. All of us have our own mountains to climb,” said Mirza, as he alluded to the highs and lows that life offers.

“I went to a government school, not an English medium one,” he said, as he addressed the crowd in English.

“When I started working, I wore Rs200 shoes from Landa Bazaar. I didn’t have proper climbing clothes even.”

In Karachi, where he finished his higher education, he tutored kids to make some extra money. “Every day, I walked from Tariq Road to Garden to save money. This continued for five years,” he said, as the crowd sighed.

From working as a porter and carrying loads for foreign expeditions that came to Shimshal, to becoming a cook and finally and a high-altitude porter, he paid his dues and worked his way to achieve his goal. Being the industrious person he is, he started looking around for a way to make mountaineering popular with Pakistanis.

Taking his sister under his wings, he worked on their climbing skills and went to climb a few peaks in Pakistan, with zero sponsorship from a local or multinational. In between all this, he used social media and raised funds, with mostly white climbers sending in monetary donations as well as climbing gear for the two siblings.

Then set his sight on Everest. His motto of gender equality and the buzz he created online landed him lucrative sponsorships and generous funding from donors who had faith in him.

Once Everest was done, the siblings went on to do the Seven Summits challenge.

The Seven Summits are the highest mountains of each of the seven continents. Though unlike Everest, the remaining six peaks are not as tough or high, accenting them is a mountaineering feat.

In a short period of less than nine months, Baig and her brother successfully climbed all the six peaks including Mount Aconcagua, the highest peak in South America, followed by Mount Vinson (Antarctica), Mount Kilimanjaro (Africa), Puncak Jaya 4,884 metres, the highest peak in Indonesia, Mount McKinley in Alaska and Elbrus in Russia.

If Mirza Ali summits Everest anytime soon, his seven summits feat would be complete too and he will be the first Pakistani man to do so.

In response to a question by Dawn on whether the duo will climb five of the fourteen 8000m peaks located in Pakistan, Mirza Ali said: “K2, Nanga Parbat, Gasherbrum I and II and Broad Peak are challenging peaks and now on our list. I look forward to climbing them but for now Samina will go back to her studies.”

Once the talk was over, Ms Baig was practically mobbed by the crowd and obliged to selfies and autographs.

Meanwhile, posing with star struck fans and grinning from ear to ear, Mirza quipped to this reporter: “I believe in doing things untraditionally!”

Taking a look at his and Samina’s journey, his formula of ‘woman + opportunity = success’ sure is untraditional but very successful.

Published in Dawn, August 29th, 2014

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