When the auto reached to a small channel in the altitude of 6,000 meters, he moved two big stones to pad for the tires and nearly lost his wind. Again he did not give up.
And when the spare tire was bad, he also did not give up.
He had been a serviceman. There was no word for "to give up" in the military dictionary. He insisted on proof with rich photos and video materials.
Now, he organizes a new team to rearrange and re-edit these materials. They plan to product a 10-episode documentary "The Mysterious Place in Tibet, China: Ngari" to show the beauty of Ngari's nature, religion, folk, and culture to all people who have been to Ngari or haven't been to Ngari from home and abroad.
"The essential of a documentary is that a life is accompanied with another life. Mr. Wu has used his life to accompany with the life of Ngari," said Mr. Mo, the new director of this documentary, was moved by the spirit of Wu Yusheng.
"Most people can't touch the mysterious of Ngari by themselves. So many ancient relics in Ngari are protected by the Tibetan people, with an unalterable belief that is still visual after hundreds of years. We should tell people about all of these," told Mrs. Wang, the writer of the documentary.
China's weekly story (2013.01.27-01.31)