Career
Born in Kathmandu into a family of hereditary merchants, he spent his youth in Lhasa, Tibet where they owned a business house. During his stay in Tibet, alongside his main occupation of conducting trade between India, Nepal and Tibet, he developed an avid interest in collecting photographs, postage stamps and coins. Tuladhar also corresponded with penpals around the world.
As a rare letter writer from Tibet, his name became renowned worldwide among philatelists.
His letters bearing Tibetan stamps delighted his foreign friends, and today they have become major resources for collectors specializing in Tibetan postal history. Pratek Manitoba went to Lhasa for the first time in 1939 to join his family business house Chhusingsyar, one of the largest traders in Tibet at the time.
The firm maintained branches in Gyantse and Phari besides Ladakh and Kolkata in India. He went to Lhasa again in 1952 and returned to Kathmandu for the last time in 1960, after spending a total of 17 years in Tibet.
Tuladhar was among the last of the traditional Lhasa Newar merchants.
The historical trade ended after the caravan route linking India and Tibet through Sikkim was shut down by the Sino-Indian War in 1962.