Gasherbrum II East, Biarchedi, Manaslu East, Yebokalgan Ri, Shishapangma West
Major ascents
Four winter ascents on the eight-thousanders
Józef Jerzy Kukuczka (Polish:[ˈju.zɛfˈjɛ.ʐɨkuˈkut͡ʂ.ka]; 24 March 1948 – 24 October 1989) was a Polish mountaineer who is widely regarded one of the greatest high-altitude climbers in history.[2][3][4] In 1987, he became the second man (after Reinhold Messner) to climb all fourteen eight-thousanders in the world; a feat which took him less than 8 years to accomplish. He climbed all, except Lhotse, by new routes or in winter. He is the only person to have climbed two eight-thousanders in one winter and his ascents of Cho Oyu, Kangchenjunga and Annapurna were first winter ascents.[5][6] His ascent of K2 was made in alpine style with Tadeusz Piotrowski, that route (the so-called "Polish Line") has not had a second ascent in over 35 years.
Reinhold Messner, upon hearing that Kukuczka had completed all fourteen 8000ers, wrote to him: "you are not second you are great",[7] a line which is reproduced as the epigraph of Kukuczka book[8] and the Polish translation forms the title of a biography published in 2021.[9] He died in 1989 while attempting to climb the south face of Lhotse.[10]
Life and career
He was born in 1948 in Katowice, his family was ethnically Silesian Goral.[11] He practiced weightlifting in high school and began climbing mountains at the age of 17.[12] He was a trained electrician by profession.[13] In 1965, he became a member of the Mariusz Zaruski Tatra Scouting Club in Katowice. In 1966, he joined the Katowice Alpine Club and completed a climbing course in the Tatra Mountains.[14] After climbing in the Tatras, he progressed rapidly to the Alps, Alaska and the Himalayas.[3]
He climbed his first eight-thousander, Lhotse, in 1979.[15] The following year, he reached the summit of Mount Everest by way of a new south pillar route.[16] In 1985, he made first winter ascents on Dhaulagiri and Cho Oyu within three weeks.[17] In 1986, he made the first winter ascent of the world's third highest mountain, Kangchenjunga, together with Krzysztof Wielicki.[18] The same year, Kukuczka made one of the greatest achievements in his career by establishing a new route on the unclimbed south face of K2, which he and Tadeusz Piotrowski ascended alpine-style after overcoming extreme difficulties and staying in four bivies during the ascent alone. Their accomplishment "pushed the boundaries of Himalayan mountaineering to new heights" with Kukuczka regarding this as the "most challenging climb he had ever undertaken at altitude".[12]
Throughout his career, he ascended all fourteen eight-thousanders in seven years, 11 months and 14 days, a feat he achieved on 18 September 1987. He held the world record for shortest time span to summit the eight-thousanders for nearly 27 years until May 2014, when Kim Chang-ho beat his mark by one month and eight days.[19] Unlike many other prominent high-altitude climbers of his time, the routes Kukuczka chose on the Himalayan giants were usually original, many of them first ascents and often done in the grip of winter wind and cold.[20] During his career, Kukuczka established ten new routes on the eight-thousanders (still a record) and climbed four in winter. He was one of an elite group of Polish Himalayan mountaineers called Ice Warriors, who specialized in winter ascents.[21] In 1987, he was named Man of the Year in Poland after the completion of the "Crown of the Himalayas".[3]
In an era in Poland where even the most basic foods were scarce, Kukuczka was able to successfully mount and equip numerous expeditions to far-flung mountain ranges. Usually pressed for cash and equipment, he painted factory chimneys by rope access (industrial climbing) to earn precious złotys to finance his mountaineering dreams.[20]
Rivalry with Reinhold Messner
In the 1980s, journalists frequently described the progress of Messner and Kukuczka's climbs as a "race to complete the grand slam in climbing," but both climbers stated they did not like the description or even the implication they were competing. Ultimately, Kukuczka completed his sweep of all of the world's eight-thousanders in the winter of 1986-87, but not before Messner finished his grand slam by scaling Manaslu and Lhotse in the autumn of 1986.[16] Kukuczka accomplished this feat in less than eight years, which is twice faster than Messner though.[12][17] He also established 10 new routes on eight-thousanders compared to Messner's six.[12] On the other hand, Messner climbed all eight-thousanders without supplementary oxygen; Kukuczka didn't use supplementary oxygen on any eight-thousander except Mount Everest.[17]
Kukuczka died while attempting to climb the unclimbed South Face of Lhotse in Nepal on 24 October 1989.[28] He was leading a pitch at an altitude of about 8,200 metres (26,900 ft) on a 6 mm secondhand rope he had picked up in a market in Kathmandu. According to Ryszard Pawłowski, Kukuczka's climbing partner, the main single rope used by the team was too jammed to be used and the climbers decided to use transport rope instead. When Kukuczka lost his footing and fell, the cord was either cut or it snapped, plunging him around 2,000 metres to his death. His body was never found.[29]
Personal life
Kukuczka married Cecylia (née Ogrodzińska) with whom he had two sons, Maciej and Wojciech.[30] His younger son, Wojciech, also climbed Mount Everest just like his father.[31] Kukuczka was a Catholic.[32]
In the hamlet of Wilcze in Istebna in the highlander's summer house Jerzy Kukuczka, there is the Memorial Chamber of Jerzy Kukuczka, created in 1996 by Cecylia Kukuczka (Jerzy's wife). Commemorative plaques devoted to the memory of Kukuczka are located in Chukhung, Nepal as well as the Tatra Symbolic Cemetery in Poland.
The mountain "Yak Hotel" in Nepal in Dingboche (4400 m a.s.l.) is named after Jerzy Kukuczka.
The Jerzy Kukuczka Academy of Physical Education is a public university in Katowice that conducts teaching and research in physical education and rehabilitation.[34]
There is also a street in the Gaj district in Wrocław named after him. In 1988, the Polish Post issued a postage stamp featuring Jerzy Kukuczka honouring his reception of the Olympic Order.[35]
In 2015, a statue of Kukuczka designed by Bogumił Burzyński was unveiled at the main entrance to the Physical Education Academy (AWF) in Katowice. His name was also included on the Monument of Alpine Climbers in Katowice.[36]
He is the subject of the book Kukuczka. Opowieść o najsłynniejszym polskim himalaiście (Kukuczka: Story of the Poland's Greatest Climber) published in 2016 as well as documentary films Kukuczka by Jerzy Porębski (2011) and Jurek by Paweł Wysoczański (2014). In 2018, Robert Talarczyk directed a play entitled Himalaje (The Himalayas) devoted to the life of Kukuczka, which premiered at the Silesian Theatre in Katowice.[37]
Gallery
Monument in Katowice
Jerzy Kukuczka's memorial with Lhotse in the background
^Kortko, Dariusz; Pietraszewski, Marcin (2016). Opowieść o najsłynniejszym polskim himalaiście [The Story of the Most Famous Polish Climber] (in Polish). Warsaw: Agora SA. ISBN978-83-268-2393-0.