My father has always been a passionate man. He has always been passionate about the people of the Everest region-so much so that in 1960 he began the first of the many projects aimed at improving their

lives. In 1975 he had begun building his second hospital in the Himalayas when tragedy struck our

family. My mother and younger sister Bellinda were flying into the mountains to join him when their

small aeroplane crashed soon after take-off from Kathmandu.

2. I was in Assam when I first heard of the incident. I flew straight to Kathmandu and met my father and

oldest sister Sarah on a narrow lane on the outskirts of the city. Any hope I had clung to, that my mother

and sister were still alive, was extinguished the moment I saw my father –bowed and broken. I knew

then that mum and Bellinda would never return.

3. It was years before Dad fully came out of this period of darkness. Only by plunging himself into more

adventures and ever more projects in Nepal, could he get through it he has built forty-two school and

hospitals there.

4. As I grew up, some of Dad’s restlessness rubbed off on me. I know many people think there must be

some compulsion for the Sir Edmund Hillary to climb mountains. They assume that there was some

imperative etched in stone that says, “Thou shalt climb mountains”-and in particular Everest, whether

you like it or not. But for me, its simpler than that. I think families are like factories: the Hillary family is a

limited production mountaineer establishment.

5. Today, at age of 48, I am an inveterate mountain man. I have been on more than 30 mountaineering

expeditions, from the Himalayas to the Antarctic. And yes, I have been climbed Everest-twice.

6. I treasure the same things that drew my father to climbing-the tremendous camaraderie involved, the

intensity and adrenaline buzz especially in dangerous places where your life depends upon making the

right call. I guess that I am luckier than most because I am able to fall back on all that my father has

taught me.

On the basis of your understanding of the above passage, answer ANY EIGHT questions from the nine

given below: (8x1=8)

1. The author’s father was passionate about the people of the Everest region; so he-

(a) Climbed mountains

(b) Worked on the improvement of their lives

(c) Built schools and hospitals everywhere

(d) Invited all the family to stay there

2. The plane crash in 1975 led to the –

(a) Turning point in the author and his father’ life

(b) Death of the author’s family

(c) The author’s father becoming depress

(d) Creation of many schools and hospitals

3. The author’s father came out of the dark phase in his life by—

(a) Building schools and hospitals

(b) Taking help from others

(c) Getting support from family

(d) Engaging himself in social service

4. Why did the author prove to be the true son of his father?

(a) His father force him to

(b) His mother wanted him to

(c) He scaled the Everest twice

(d) All of these

5. Why does the author consider himself lucky?

( a) His father supported him in mountains

(b) He could learn from his father’s experiences

(c) He was able to fulfill his family’s desire

(d) He managed to continue the legac
6. What happened to the author’s mother and sister?

(a) They jumped off the plane

(b) They succumbed to their injuries after a plane crash

(c) They survived in the plane crash

(d)They left the family and settled in another country

7. The phrase, “Thou shalt climb mountains” means.

(a) You shall climb mountains

(b) You have no option but to climb mountains

(c) You shall never climb mountains

(d) You should plan about climbing mountains

8. A word similar in meaning to “section” in paragraph 4 is

(a) Narrow

(b) Outskirts

(c) Extinguished

(d) Broken

9. A word opposite in meaning to “lethargy” in paragraph 6 is

(a) Treasure

(b) Camaraderie

(c) Intensity

(d) Adrenaline​

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