Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Canadian Filmmaker Terms Ali Sadpara “a snow leopard” After His Burial

Canadian filmmaker Ali Sadpara

Canadian filmmaker Elia Saikaly, who recently followed Sajid Sadpara on his second summit of K2 in search of the bodies of fallen climbers Ali Sadpara and his companions, shared a picture of the Pakistani flag marking the place of Ali Sadpara’s burial, at Camp-4 on K2.

Elia Saikaly, taking to his Instagram penned a heartfelt note for the legendary mountaineer Ali Sadpara, whose dead body was found five months after he went missing during his K2 winter expedition.

The filmmaker recalled the fatal car accident which took his father, back on July 25, 2018, which according to him, was a motivation to accompany Sajid to find his father and the answers to what had happened to the fallen climbers.

He said that Sajid’s spirit and determination was as high as it could be for a son who lost his father to a mystery.

“Sajid was unstoppable, fueled by a determination only a son can have for his fallen and missing father,” the post added.

Saikaly narrated his experience on the high altitude, terming it as a “death zone”, while also thanking the K2 for being “kind” to them.

“The strength, bravery, courage and commitment to his father was one of the powerful forces I’ve ever witnessed. He is his father’s son,” he wrote alongside the post.

The post follows with Saikaly’s narration of how Sajid first buried Juan Pablo under the snow, collecting some of his belongings to give to the family, and then lay his father to rest.

The entire journey would surely have been a heartbreaking one, as Saikaly wrote:

“I hung by my ascender on a 75-degree slope of blue ice and recorded that moment, and all others, as our parallel mission was to honour our missing friends by finishing what we started in winter. We retraced their footsteps, found answers, many which are devastatingly heartbreaking, and we continue to gain insight into exactly what happened.”

He put his belief into words that nothing is impossible if done wholeheartedly, saying, “Lead with your heart, not your ego. One can never go wrong.”

The post reflects Saikaly’s comfort in the end that Ali Sadpara, who he called a snow leopard, rests in peace now.

 

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A post shared by Elia Saikaly (@eliasaikaly)

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#K2Search: Sajid Ali Sadpara Reveals New Details About His Father’s Dead Body

Sajid Ali Sadpara K2 mission

Sajid Ali Sadpara, who went to conquer the K2 mountain for the second time to find his father, Ali Sadpara’s dead body, has released some new details.

In a video message shared on his official Twitter handle, Sajid Ali Sadpara said that it is quite difficult for his team members and him to bring down the dead bodies of Ali Sadpara and the other climber who went missing in February.

“The bodies of Mohammad Ali Sadpara and John Snorri were at a difficult place,” he said, adding that it was not possible for them to bring the bodies down.

He said that they were trying to shift the bodies near the route leading to the base camp.

Earlier on July 26, the body of Muhammad Ali Sadpara had been found five months after he went missing along with two other mountaineers during a winter expedition of K2.

According to Alpine Club of Pakistan, the body of the dead mountaineer was found 300 metres from the so-called bottleneck at K2.

It further said that two bodies were found at camp four, 300 metres below the bottleneck on K2 one of which is confirmed to be of Ali Sadpara.

Earlier in February, Ali Sadpara had gone missing along with his two climbing partners – Iceland’s John Snorri and Juan Pablo Mohr from Chile. The trio was attempting to climb K2, the world’s second-highest peak at 8,611 metres.

It had been reported that Sadpara and his team had successfully summited the 8,611-metre K2 in February but soon lost communication and went missing.

The Pakistan Army had subsequently launched a number of search operations but owing to bad weather conditions could not make much headway.

Who Was Muhammad Ali Sadpara?

Muhammad Ali Sadpara, known as the bravest climbing hero of Pakistan, hails from a small village in Skardu, Gilgit-Baltistan. Lacking better training opportunities, he began his hobby of mountaineering as a porter and travelled with certified mountaineering teams but only went to the last base camp with their luggage and returned.

After that, Ali Sadpara started his journey and climbed many famous peaks. In 2019, he climbed the world’s fifth-highest peak at 8,485 meters in Nepal. He is the first Pakistani mountaineer to have climbed seven mountain peaks above 8,000 meters in the world.

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