ISLAMABAD: “A life is not measured by quantity, but by its quality,” says Hubert Wischnewski as he reminisces about his son Joel, who died while trying to climb the feared Nanga Parbat over two years ago.
Mr Wischnewski spent the last week travelling to Pakistan from France with his wife and two daughters to pay their respects to Joel. After landing in Gilgit, the family hiked 13,000 feet to the Herrligkoffer’s Alpinists Cemetery, near Nanga Parbat Base Camp, where Joel Wischnewski now rests.
“This is the first time we have been able to visit his grave,” said Myriam, the late climber’s sister.
The journey had been a special one for the family, Myriam explained. She said that it meant a lot to them that her brother’s body had been found and given a proper burial.
“We are indebted to locals from the Rupal Village for bringing him down and burying him along with their prayers,” Myriam told Dawn.