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All-Black group makes history by summiting Mount Everest

<i>Full Circle Everest</i><br/>Full Circle members go hiking in less-icy condiitons. Henderson is in the center row
Full Circle Everest
Full Circle members go hiking in less-icy condiitons. Henderson is in the center row

By Lilit Marcus, CNN

About 4,000 people have summited Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak. And only eight of them have been Black.

That is one of the reasons that Full Circle, a group of Black climbers and mountaineers, was formed.

“It is an expedition that is certainly about climbing. It is about spending time in the mountains, but it is also about building community, global community. And it’s about changing the narrative for the Black community, particularly in the United States and how we interact with outdoor spaces,” says Rosemary Saal, a member of Full Circle.

Saal is used to scaling literal and metaphorical heights. She was a member of an all-Black team that hiked Denali in Alaska and another that reached the top of Mount Kilimanjaro.

But being part of Full Circle, she says, is different. The mountaineering community is relatively small, and Everest is the name that nearly everyone in the world can recognize.

“This mountain gets attention,” says another Full Circle member, Abby Dione.

Dione lives in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where she owns and operates Coral Cliffs Climbing Gym. As one of only two Black women in the United States to own a climbing gym, she’s passionate about giving women of color ways to see themselves in the outdoors.

“The goal (of Full Circle) is to demystify this process,” Dione says. “Regardless of the mountain in question, the real goal for us is about reverse engineering things for folks.”

On May 12, seven members of the Full Circle group successfully reached the summit of Mount Everest, including both Dione and Saal.

“The Full Circle Everest team led by Philip Henderson from California has made history as the first all-Black team to stand atop the summit, the highest mountain on earth,” Jiban Ghimire, managing director at Shangri-La Nepal Treks, confirmed to the Himalayan Times.

In addition to Dione and Saal, the climbers who reached the top are Manoah Ainuu, Frederick Campbell, Eddie Taylor, James Kagambi, Desmond Mullins, Thomas Moore and eight Sherpa guides. Henderson led the team from base camp but did not attempt the summit himself.

The mountain is the metaphor

One critical element of Full Circle’s work is being respectful to the local Nepalis and to the Sherpas who accompany climbing groups on their ascents.

Take the most famous Everest climb, for example — it was Sir Edmund Hillary who got the lion’s share of attention in 1953, with his Sherpa guide and colleague Tenzing Norgay’s name not added to the record books for decades.

In addition, Hillary was referred to as the first person to climb to the top of Everest, even though there were many accounts of Sherpas reaching the highest peak before foreigners had ever set foot in the country.

Dione notes that Full Circle aims to “de-colonize” Everest climbs. It isn’t just about increasing the visibility of mountaineers of color but about using inclusive language.

“Our goal here is to help folks aspire to have a profound and respectful relationship with the outdoors and feel not entitled to it, but welcome to it. If you see it can be done, you can do it right.”

Saal, who is biracial, says that some of the first people to push back on her childhood interest in sports and the outdoors were in her own community.

“When I was young, I took my first rock climbing courses, mountaineering courses, whatever. I would tell family members or friends or just different people in my life about what I was doing. And immediately it’s like, ‘Oh, Black people don’t do that. That’s the White side of you. Black people don’t go skiing. Black people don’t go climbing.'”

Luckily, there were community groups in her native Seattle that helped young Saal pursue her interests. In those groups, she saw educators from a wide variety of racial and socioeconomic backgrounds, and they helped to quiet the voices that told her it couldn’t be done.

For Dione, there were additional questions about women in the outdoors that she couldn’t find good answers for.

“What is it like to menstruate at 6,000 meters and above?” she asks aloud.

The hero’s journey

Both women cite Phil Henderson, founder of Full Circle, as a major inspiration.

Henderson’s nickname is Uncle Phil, after the character who mentored Will on “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.”

And his avuncular nickname is well-earned. California native Henderson has been a pioneer for Black men and women in the outdoors. He led an all-Black climbing team to the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro and is a longtime instructor at the National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS) in Wyoming.

Like many young Black men, Henderson was encouraged to participate in team sports. He excelled at football, but an injury ended his NFL dreams. From there, he pivoted to a love of outdoor sports.

In 2000, Henderson led an all-Black climbing group to the top of Mount Kenya. The experience was transformative — he was leading not only a literal adventure but a new generation of Black outdoor experts.

“There is representation of Black people in mountaineering, climbing and the overall outdoor industry,” he wrote on Instagram, “but our stories are not being told.”

He is the only member of the team to have previous Everest experience: In 2012, Henderson was the lone Black member of an American climbing expedition at the world’s highest peak, which he refers to by its traditional Tibetan name of Chomolungma.

Starting the journey

The group of nine climbers arrived in Nepal in January 2022 to begin the altitude acclimation process.

Should all of Full Circle’s members complete their climb, the number of Black people to have reached the top of Mount Everest will double immediately.

The costs that come with climbing the world’s highest peak can be prohibitive.

Full Circle Everest now has a group of corporate sponsors including North Face, Summit Coffee, Smartwool and Mountain Safety Research (MSR).

But the cost of blazing a trail is invaluable.

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