Slovak rapper Separ (38) outraged several mountain lovers. An artist named Michael Kmeť caught it from all sides for the fact that during the ascent to of the base camp of Mount Everest, left his signature in several places, created graffiti and spray-painted an inscription on a famous stone. The rapper explained that there were already signatures or stickers everywhere and he received permission from the owner of the property where he left his creation.
However, Dorota Nvotová, who has been going to Nepal and the Himalayas for 18 years, took a hard time in Separ. “Separ in the Himalayas broke a new low. D*bilism from the Slovak valleys is not only aimed at the Tatra huts, but it is headed straight for the Himalayas. Well, nothing, I’ll be there in a week and I’ll iron Slovakia’s reputation. And when I find it, I’ll take it off. Namaste, you m*gor,” she messaged him in a status.
She reacted sharply in the video, which you can find at the beginning of the article. “What do you have to have in your head to go to the other end of the globe to the Himalayas and have the need to mark the stone you’re walking by like a little dog that pokes a pole, you coconut. What’s that good for?” Nvotová doesn’t understand. She added that there are local signatures on the stone, but added in one breath that it’s their land.But you have to come there from Slovakia and beat the hell out of Separ,” darkened the artist.
The ex-husband of the singer Tina returned the blow to Nvotova with interest. “The fact that some former alcoholic on anti-depressants will write that I marked every stone I passed is already over. And some of the people who join it have absolutely no interest in me,” he responded on Instagram.It also broke me that the lady, who is obviously very crazy, said that only the locals sign the stone in the base camp, because it is their stone and only they can sign. Are you really that out of your mind, you tube?” he didn’t put a napkin in front of his mouth.
He continued that the mentioned stone is a symbol of the base camp and according to him, only tourists sign on it and not locals at all. “That stone in that base camp is meant for people to go there and sign. If the park ranger was there, he wouldn’t say a bad word. There are thousands of signatures,” emphasized Separ. “I know there are two views on it, that it doesn’t belong in the mountains, but if I didn’t sign it, someone else will,” he said, adding that he likes such an attraction.
Separ described himself as the type of tourist who, if he spots a discarded bottle in the mountains, picks it up and later throws it in the trash. He compared signing and stickers in the Himalayas to a couple in love hanging a lock on the Eiffel Tower in Paris. “You also do something that doesn’t belong there, but everyone does it and it’s a symbol of the place,” he explained his point of view on the whole thing.
Fundraising for stone cleaning
Nvotová decided to take matters into her own hands and created a fundraiser from which she wants to pay for the cleaning of the stone in the base camp. Being the owner of a travel agency that often organizes treks in the Himalayas, she wants to use her connections to send a group of men to the location. He plans to use the money for travel expenses and also materials for removal.”They will try to sand it down, if it goes down, if it doesn’t, it will have to be chemically removed,” said Nvotová in the video.
The fundraising took the rapper’s breath away. “Not only does someone want to make a living off of me, but they also start begging people for money. Why didn’t you go and clean all those tags and stickers until now? You should have gone there with a spatula, you tube. It’s unbelievable that you’re begging people for money because you’ve created your own cause,” Separ shook his head in disbelief. “Unbelievable that this is our biggest national problem, that I covered the old sign,” he added.
The rapper is surprised that the well-known musician and traveler did not use a transparent account for the collection. “Miss Nvotova, you are so out of line. I’ve never seen anyone more out of place than you are.” he messaged her directly. “The dry cleaning in a national park would be the most I’d stick out of this. Which is a much better idea than respraying an old sign in three seconds. Brutal idea” he said ironically.
In a few hours, Nvotová collected more 720 eur and stopped his challenge. “The money that is not used will go towards school fees for Nepali children. Some of you are asking why I stopped the collection when more money could have gone to the children. Simply because the purpose of the collection was to clean the stone, if you want to send money to the children, you can do so through the official account of the non-profit,” she wrote in the status.
He does not know when the cleaning will take place, they are waiting for better weather. “We are in contact with the municipal office in the last village before Base Camp, which is in charge of the area. They plan to send people there as soon as the weather improves, and they will do everything to remove it. I cannot say what technique and tools they will use at the moment, I will inform you about everything,” she added. “Dorothy, thank you! You saved us! I hope you document it and I’m just correcting you. It’s about stone, not stones. There’s only one,” Separ responded.
