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Under the Himalayas
Podcast

Under the Himalayas

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In ancient Asia, a land full of mysteries and civilizations, some people still lead a life in the most primitive way: they live, produce, carry things on shoulders, pick things by hands, travel on foot and migrate……they help develop a way of making a living and create a human landscape. With all the sufferings they bear, they have preserved what modern city-dwellers call “culture”. Yet, these people have only one simple goal - to survive. In the documentary series 'Under the Himalayas', a programme of five half-hour episodes, we shall leave solid footprints in five different places: taking the highest peak in the world Mount Everest as the centre of a circle, we shall lead the audience on voyage along the northwest region of China to the treacherous Huashan, going across Gan-Shaan plain and Xinjiang terrain, passing through Qinghai into the mysterious Tibetan area, crossing the border via the glacier for taking a break at the foot of Mount Everest in Nepal before arriving at the ancient but emerging country - India. On our way, not a satisfying life can be seen: labourious porters chanting lonesome but melodious old tunes at the ancient Huashan; scarred hands of the cotton farmers at Gobi Desert in Xinjiang; following Tibetan drivers jolting along the hundred-million-year-old glacier in the Ali prefecture at thousand meters of altitude; at the Sino-Nepalese border, the skinny backs of the Sherpa guides who are destined to challenge their physical limits; hardships and plight endured by barefoot rickshaw pullers with mixed feelings in Calcutta - the “dying city” built 150 years ago. When the journey of lives ends, we may gradually be able to savour the satisfaction from life.

In ancient Asia, a land full of mysteries and civilizations, some people still lead a life in the most primitive way: they live, produce, carry things on shoulders, pick things by hands, travel on foot and migrate……they help develop a way of making a living and create a human landscape. With all the sufferings they bear, they have preserved what modern city-dwellers call “culture”. Yet, these people have only one simple goal - to survive. In the documentary series 'Under the Himalayas', a programme of five half-hour episodes, we shall leave solid footprints in five different places: taking the highest peak in the world Mount Everest as the centre of a circle, we shall lead the audience on voyage along the northwest region of China to the treacherous Huashan, going across Gan-Shaan plain and Xinjiang terrain, passing through Qinghai into the mysterious Tibetan area, crossing the border via the glacier for taking a break at the foot of Mount Everest in Nepal before arriving at the ancient but emerging country - India. On our way, not a satisfying life can be seen: labourious porters chanting lonesome but melodious old tunes at the ancient Huashan; scarred hands of the cotton farmers at Gobi Desert in Xinjiang; following Tibetan drivers jolting along the hundred-million-year-old glacier in the Ali prefecture at thousand meters of altitude; at the Sino-Nepalese border, the skinny backs of the Sherpa guides who are destined to challenge their physical limits; hardships and plight endured by barefoot rickshaw pullers with mixed feelings in Calcutta - the “dying city” built 150 years ago. When the journey of lives ends, we may gradually be able to savour the satisfaction from life.

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Rickshaw Pullers like Autumn Leaves

More than a century ago, rickshaws were seen in India, along with the invasion of western culture. At first, only white families used them as a means of transport. In the last century, the government began to allow the lower class to make a living by taki
World and society 10 years
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21:44

Walk by the Skyline

In the 1920s, Sherpa people started to work as guides and porters for mountaineers. Sherpas mainly live in Nepal, and their population is around 40,000. With a higher concentration of haemoglobin in blood than most other people, Sherpas are less prone to
World and society 10 years
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21:45

The Nearest Place to the Sky

China National Highway 219, with an average elevation exceeding 4,500 metres, is one of the most dangerous highways, as well as one of the highest and with the toughest physical conditions. Most of the time travelling in Tibet is spent journeying on the r
World and society 10 years
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21:45

Cotton Pickers in Xinjiang

Xinjiang, the border area of Northwestern China, accounts for one-sixth of the country's land area. The cotton fields are vast, ready for harvest. The annual cotton production of Xinjiang accounts for one-third of the nation's total. Massive labour is nee
World and society 10 years
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21:45

Huashan - My Home

Huashan is in Shaanxi province, China, at an elevation of over 2,000 metres. It was called Xiyue (western great mountain), and known as the most dangerous geographical spot in China. Formed from a single mass of granite, Huashan has unpredictable weather.
World and society 10 years
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21:44
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