Abdul Karim Mohammad aka "Little Karim" from Hushe, Northern Pakistan is a mountain porter and mountain guide. As a young man, Karim climbed to the town of Skardu in 1976, convinced that he would find work as a porter for groups of climbers arriving in the area.
In France, it was Jean-Marc Boivin's hang glider that made him famous, it was on the slopes of Gasherbrum II in 1985. On July 14, Boivin broke the world record for altitude jump by taking off from the summit of the Pakistani giant at 8,035 meters above sea level. The filmmaker Laurent Chevalier draws a film from it: "L'Oiseau Rare". But the jack-of-all-trades of French mountaineering was not the only rare specimen on the Gasherbrum that summer. Before takeoff, it is the Balti carrier Abdul Karim, a tall gentleman barely five feet tall, who makes an impression by hoisting the 16 kg (with a wingspan of five meters!) from the hang glider to the top. Captivated by the incredible strength that emanates from such a small body, Laurent Chevallier shoots a second film from this expedition: "Little Karim".
Legend has it that the first load that the native of the village of Hushe carried in the Himalayas was Chris Bonington. In 1978, the famous expedition leader was on his way to K2 with the cream of British mountaineering. Little Karim presents himself to be hired as an altitude carrier but Bonington rejects him: too small. The Pakistani then slips his head between the legs of His Majesty's subject, hoists him on his shoulde…