In 1954, the
summit of K2 was reached for the first time by the Italians
Lino Lacedelli and Achille Compagnoni. On the same expedition
was a young ambitious climber who was regarded as the
superstar of climbing and mountaineering in Italy. This
is Walter Bonatti's version.
One of the expedition members, Walter Bonatti, tells a
different story of what happened on K2. Young Bonatti,
aged 24 at the time, was to carry the oxygen bottles together
with the Hunza porter Mahdi to Lacedelli and Compagnoni
in camp 9. Before reaching the last camp where the two
summiteers were waiting in their tent, darkness overtook
Bonatti and Mahdi. They called out to Lacedelli and Compagnoni
since they could not find the camp, but the latter did
not direct them to the camp, neither did they come down
to help, instead they shouted from their tent, urging
the two carriers to leave the oxygen bottles and return
to camp 8. This was impossible in the dark and the blizzard
and so Bonatti and Mahdi were forced to bivouac out in
the open, without bivouac gear or sleeping bags. As by
a miracle, Bonatti survived the bivouac without any injuries
while Mahdi suffered frostbite of both hands and feet.
The following morning
Mahdi started the return to camp 8 and Bonatti followed
soon after him, leaving the oxygen bottles. Later Lacedelli
and Compagnoni fetched the oxygen bottles from where they
had been left. According to them the oxygen ran out halfway,
but they managed to reach the summit in spite of this.
After returning to Italy, the expedition in general and
Lacedelli and Compagnoni in particular, were looked upon
as heroes, but for some reason Bonattis effort to bring
up the oxygen bottles and his remarkable bivouac were
barely mentioned at all. During the next decade Bonattis
part of the expedition was only briefly mentioned if at
all by national media. Bonatti himself could find no reason
to why his part of the expedition was overlooked and,
it seemed, hushed down. Finally, on the tenth anniversary
of the summit conquest an article appeared in one of the
national newspapers accusing Bonatti of having intended
a summit attempt by himself. Furthermore, he was accused
of having used the oxygen designated for Lacedelli and
Campagnoli during his bivouac; this would be the reason
why the summiteers had run out of oxygen before reaching
the summit. It turned out this story had been spread within
the alpine community in Italy, but in order to keep scandals
out of the expedition it had been quieted so efficiently
it took a decade before even Bonatti himself was became
aware of it through the article.
After these accusations were brought out in the open Bonatti
started a lawsuit to clear his name. Eventually the newspaper
lost the case. It was established that Bonatti could not
have used the oxygen during his bivouac since he and Mahdi
did not have oxygen masks in their possession (the masks
were in camp 9 with Lacedelli and Compagnoni). Neither
had he abandoned Mahdi as was suggested in the article.
On the contrary, he had done everything possible to help
the Hunza make it through the night while the summiteers
in the last camp had refused to come and help them. Although
Bonatti was freed from accusations of being a liar and
a thief, the court did not determine the true course of
actions.
Outside the courtroom Bonatti has for almost half a century
maintained his version of the story. He argues that the
oxygen bottles could not have run out before Lacedelli
and Compagnoli reached the summit. The statement that
they couldn’t be bothered to take the empty cylinders
off their backs, and instead carried them to the summit,
is absurd; the burden of empty oxygen bottles is too heavy
to carry climbing in thin air not to be bothered to remove
them. Bonatti himself took the full bottle off and on
several times without much effort while searching for
the last camp. A more significant feature is a photograph
taken on the summit where Lacedelli is still wearing his
oxygen mask. This clearly points to the fact that there
was indeed oxygen left, he would have no reason whatsoever
to wear the mask should the bottle be empty; on the contrary,
he would have got the feeling of suffocating.
So the Italian success of 1954 remains, but the versions
of the preceding events differ. Was it an expedition that
succeeded in spite of the betrayal of a young ambitious
man, or was it the survival of a young ambitious man in
spite of the betrayal of his expedition? Bonatti presents
his version of the expedition in his book “The Mountains
of My Life”.
Read more about K2 in this popular
article about the climbing history of K2, from the first
try in 1902 until the Italian success in 1954. 
- "The only logical
deduction is that no one has ever really wanted either
to confront or to resolve the whole false history of K2
nor expose the one terrible lie that is also most blatanty
obvious."
- Walter Bonatti
(The mountains of my life)

Books about K2
» K2
: Triumph and Tragedy by Jim Curran
» K2
: Challenging the Sky by Roberto Mantovani and Kurt
Diemberger
» The
Mountains of my life by Walter Bonatti
» Five Miles High
by Charles Houston and Robert Bates
» K2
: The 1939 Tragedy by Andrew J. Kaufman and William
L. Putnam
» The
Last Step : The American Ascent of K2 by Rick Ridgeway
» K2
by Patrick Meyers
» The
Endless Knot by Kurt Diemberger
» Omnibus
by Kurt Diemberger
» K2
by Reinhold Messner
» K2
: Savage Mountain, Savage Summer by John Barry
Videos about K2
» K2,
starring: Michael Biehn and Matt Craven
Other mountaineering stories
» K2
climbing history. From the first try to the Italian
success in 1954
» Tenzing
Norgay and his moment on the summit of the World
» Hermann
Buhl and the first ascent of Nanga Parbat
» The
first ascent of Mont Blanc anno 1786
» Reinhold
Messner - Nanga Parbat 1970 and 1978
» Reinhold
Messner - breaking new limits on Mount Everest
» Reinhold
Messner - the Manaslu tragedy
» Reinhold
Messner & Peter Habeler - Hidden Peak in alpine
style
» Reinhold
Messner & Hans Kammerlander - traversing the Gasherbrums
» A
tale from Lofoten, experienced and written by Per Jerberyd
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