Furdiki Sherpa's husband died while fixing
ropes for his foreign clients on the 8,850-metre (29,035-ft)
mountain in 2013.
She said she would make a joint bid in May with Nima Doma Sherpa,
wife of one of the 16 sherpas killed in an avalanche near the
base camp in 2014.
"We are going to climb the mountain to close our pain and to
honor our husbands by reaching the peak they could not," the two
said in a statement.
Nima, 36, said both climbers had completed training and scaled
two smaller peaks. Nepal is home to eight of the world’s 14
highest mountains.
Everest, which straddles Nepal-China border and can be reached
from both sides, has been climbed by 4,833 people since it was
first scaled by New Zealander Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing
Norgay Sherpa in 1953, according to a post by Everest blogger
Alan Arnette.
Climbing officials say only about 500 of the Everest climbers
were women.
Furdiki, 42, who like most sherpas goes by her first name, said
the death of her husband resulted in immense economic hardship.
“The death of my husband is not the end of my life,” the mother
of two children told Reuters. “I am undertaking the expedition
to spread the message that widows can accomplish even such hard
adventures."
(Editing by Sanjeev Miglani and Nick Macfie)
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