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ཤར་པའི་སྐད་

Sherpa
Elmhurst +4
Southern AsiaNepal flagNepalIndia flagIndiaHimalayan
Community Profile: Encompassing Nepal, northern India, Bhutan, and Tibet, the greater Himalayan region is a nexus of cultural and linguistic diversity. In recent decades, tens of thousands people from various parts of the region have settled in Queens and Brooklyn, making New York into a new microcosm of Himalayan diversity. Central Tibetan or Nepali may serve as a lingua franca, and Himalayan New Yorkers are generally united by their connection to Tibetan culture, written language, tradition, and religion, including for some the Classical Tibetan language, but the diversity of their own languages and cultures is also substantial.
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T

he Sherpa community estimates that there may be as many as 11,000 Sherpas in the New York area, mostly from the Solukhumbu area of northern Nepal in the region of Mt. Everest (known as Chomolungma), where so many famous Sherpa mountaineers have worked. Though some are in Brooklyn and elsewhere, most New York Sherpas live within a few miles of the Sherpa Gompa, a Tibetan Buddhist temple founded by the United Sherpa Association in the center of Jackson Heights/Elmhurst. Housed in an old church, the temple has become an important center not only for Sherpas but also for the wider Himalayan community. Down the block is another Sherpa community center where the Sherpa's Tibetic language is taught, and there are also efforts to launch an occasional Sherpa-language radio station and create a community hub upstate in Walkill.

Note that the language above may be used throughout the New York area — this is just one significant site.
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ཤར་པའི་སྐད་

Sherpa

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