In 1939, Austrian mountaineer
Heinrich Harrer leaves behind his pregnant wife to join
Peter Aufschnaiter in a team attempting to summit
Nanga Parbat in
India (now part of Pakistan). When
World War II begins in 1939, they are arrested by the British authorities for being
enemy aliens, and are imprisoned in a
prisoner-of-war camp in
Dehradun in the
Himalayan foothills, in the present-day Indian state of
Uttarakhand. Harrer's wife, Ingrid, who has given birth to a son he has not seen, sends him divorce papers from Austria, by then
annexed by
Nazi Germany. In 1944, Harrer and Aufschnaiter escape the prison and cross into
Tibet. After being initially rejected by the isolated nation, they manage to travel in disguise to the Tibetan capital city of
Lhasa. They become the house guests of Tibetan diplomat
Kungo Tsarong. The Tibetan senior official
Ngawang Jigme also extends friendship to the two foreigners with gifts of custom-made Western suits. Aufschnaiter falls in love with the tailor, Pema Lhaki, and marries her. Harrer opts to remain single, both to focus on his new job of surveying the land and to avoid experiencing another failed relationship; much to the disappointment and dismay of his friends. In 1945, Harrer plans to return to Austria upon hearing of the war's end; but his son Rolf sends him a cold letter in which he says that he is not his father. This stops him from leaving Tibet. Soon afterwards, Harrer is invited to the
Potala Palace and becomes the
14th Dalai Lama's tutor in world geography, science, and Western culture. They end up becoming friends. Meanwhile, political relations with the new
Communist government of China sour as they make plans to take control of Tibet in replacement of the former central government, now defeated and retreated to Taiwan. Ngawang Jigme leads the
Tibetan army at the border town of
Chamdo to halt the advancing
People's Liberation Army. However, he ends up surrendering and blows up the Tibetan ammunition dump after the one-sided
Battle of Chamdo. During the treaty signing, Kungo Tsarong tells Harrer that if Jigme had not destroyed the weapons supply, the Tibetan guerrillas could have held the mountain passes for months or even years; long enough to appeal to other nations for help. He also states that, for Tibetans,
capitulation is like a
death sentence. As the
Chinese occupy Tibet, Harrer condemns Jigme for betraying his country, declaring their friendship over. Out of disgust and contempt, he further humiliates the senior official by returning the jacket that Jigme gave him as a present, a grave insult in Tibetan culture; as well as by throwing him onto the ground before storming off. Harrer tries to convince the Dalai Lama to flee, but he refuses; not wanting to abandon his people in spite of the danger. However, he encourages Harrer to return to Austria and be a father to his son. After the
enthronement ceremony, in which the Dalai Lama is formally enthroned as the spiritual and temporal leader of Tibet, Harrer bids his friends farewell and returns to Austria in 1951. Harrer's wife and her new husband almost do not recognize him for how different he is. Harrer's son, Rolf, bitterly refuses to meet him at first; but Harrer leaves a music box that the Dalai Lama gave him, and this piques the boy's interest. Years later, Harrer and Rolf (now a teenager) are seen mountain-climbing together, suggesting they have mended their relationship. ==Cast==