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South African woman, Johanna Mazibuko, is the oldest woman in the world at the age of 128. The Centenarian celebrated her birthday on May 11 and ever since then, there have been loud calls to have her enlisted in the Guinness World Record.
Johanna Mazibuko was born on May 11, 1894. She grew up on a maize farm in the farming province of Ottosdal. Despite being illiterate, she told local news agency: “We lived so well on the farms. There were no problems.” Due to old age, Johan Mazibuko doesn’t really remember all of her memories.
She remembered being married to an older man whose wife had died. His name was Stawana Mazibuko. “He was an independent man. He had a horse carriage and cows. I would milk the cows and make butter to sell. That man treated me very well and made me forget about my life before him. I did not lack anything.”
Mazibuko had seven kids during her lifetime in which two of them are alive at the moment.
Safe to say Johanna enjoyed a happy marriage and family life. She spent most of her life as a domestic worker for farm owners and satisfactorily served diligently. She is has fifty grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
Having lived through the racial period of apartheid, the South African native said she will never forget voting in the first democratic elections in 1994. “Mandela was my person. He allowed us to control ourselves. He got us houses and made the government give us pensions,” she relieved her memories of the South African revolutionary to News 24.
Mama Mazibuko has difficulty in hearing at the moment but can still see. Assisted by a frame, she can still navigate her way around home.
“My body is stiff. When I walk, I walk like a child. When people are walking up and down the streets, I just watch through my window and wish I could be like them.”
Johanna’s caregiver, Thandiwe Wesinyana has lived with her since 2001. Thandiwe Wesinyana, said, “I can’t sleep when I am not next to her. When I come back, she will also say she couldn’t sleep. She says she just sits by the window looking at the gate and wondering when I will be back.”
Mazibuko credits her health to fresh milk and wild spinach. She also fed on locust. “Now, I eat modern food. I am used to it, but I do miss the food I grew up on,” she said.
Johanna Mazibuko is not too sure on why she has reached such an advanced age,surpassing generations. Her request when she passes away is that “Her family must slaughter a cow for her and bury her well so that she will never bother people.”
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