Yahoo – AFP, 20 Aug 2014
A Japanese man born months before the Wright brothers carried out the first human flight was recognised Wednesday as the world's oldest male at the age of 111.
Japanese Sakari Momoi, aged 111, receives a certificate naming him as the world's oldest man by the Guinness World Records at a hospital in Tokyo on August 20, 2014 (AFP/ Jiji Press) |
A Japanese man born months before the Wright brothers carried out the first human flight was recognised Wednesday as the world's oldest male at the age of 111.
Sakari
Momoi, a former high school principal who was born on February 5, 1903,
received a certificate from Guinness World Records confirming the achievement.
Dressed in
a black suit, white shirt and silver tie, Momoi told assembled media at the
Tokyo care home where he lives that he did not plan on going anywhere just yet.
"I
want to live for about two more years," he said in soft voice.
Momoi
bagged the title after the death in June of American Alexander Imich, who was
born a day earlier.
The
recognition means Japan is now home to the world's oldest man and woman, with
116-year-old Misao Okawa of Osaka taking the female honours.
Except for
poor hearing, Momoi is in good health and enjoys reading books and watching
sumo on television, according to local press.
He was born
in Minamisoma, Fukushima, an area that was badly hit by the deadly
9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami in 2011 that triggered the world worst
nuclear crisis in a generation.
According
to Guinness, he moved to Saitama, north of Tokyo, many years ago.
Japan,
known for the longevity of its people, was previously home to the oldest man
ever to have lived -- Jiroemon Kimura, who died in June 2013 at the age of 116.
Around a
quarter of Japan's population of 128 million is aged 65 or older.
The figure,
already one of the highest proportions in the world, is expected to rise to
around 40 percent over coming decades.
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(13) Question: Dear Kryon, I’m very concerned about the obesity epidemic, particularly in the U.S. Around me I see people getting bigger and more unhealthy, all for the sake of convenience and saving time. You mentioned at one point a famine, and I suspect the famine won’t be from a lack of food, but from an abundance of food that has no nutritional value.
I wonder how we can honor the Earth by eating nothing that comes straight from it? Of course this involves caring for the lands and oceans as part of a bigger issue and making that connection, too. Is this what it will finally take for people to switch to a healthier way of living?
Its amazing how detached people are from the food they eat. We don’t even honor our digestive processes, the way we combine foods. Whatever happened to nutrition? Atkins is no solution; there is no balance in it. Gastric bypass is all about quantity reduction, not quality increase. When will people make the direct connection between what/how they eat and their health? Is a change in diet and lifestyle part of the upcoming shift?
Answer: The shift has little to do with it. It’s a culture-specific problem and has to do with consciousness of health. Go study the cultures on your planet that have very few overweight Humans. Start with the Japanese. They have some of the same western work ethics and live in very sophisticated industrial-based environments. Yet they aren’t overweight. It’s about the core food groups and the combination of them.
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