'''Seven Years in Tibet''' is a true
adventure story written by
Austrian mountaineer Heinrich Harrer based on his real life experiences in
Tibet between 1944 and 1951 during the onset of the
Second World War and the Chinese
People's Liberation Army Invasion.
Seven Years in Tibet tells the story of how Austrians
Heinrich Harrer and
Peter Aufschnaiter were imprisoned by the
British while
mountaineering in the north of
India at the beginning of
World War II in 1939. They eventually escaped across the border into Tibet in 1944 and crossed the treacherous high
plateau. Shortly after arriving in Tibet, they were ordered to return to India. They were able to disguise themselves, and make their way to
Lhasa, where they were warmly received. Harrer was introduced to the
Dalai Lama, who was still a boy, and became a
tutor and then close friend to the young spiritual leader. Harrer and Aufschnaiter remained in the country until the
Communist Chinese invasion in 1950.
Two films have been made of the book; the first, in 1956, a 76 minute documentary directed by Hans Nieter, includes film taken by Harrer during his stay in Tibet, and Harrer himself reconstructing various scenes from his adventures. The second, ''
Seven Years in Tibet'', released in 1997, was directed by
Jean-Jacques Annaud and starred
Brad Pitt and
David Thewlis.
See also
★ ''Beyond Seven Years in Tibet, My Life Before, During and After'' — Heinrich Harrer's full autobiography published in English in July 2007.
External links
★
Seven Years in Tibet Book Review at The Open Critic (1956)