Windsor Star

HARD WORK AND FAITH

Oldest person shares tips for a long life

- RAYMOND SIMPSON

DUANVALE, JAMAICA

Violet Brown spent much of her life cutting sugarcane in the fields around her home in western Jamaica. She attended church regularly, avoids pork and chicken and celebrated her 117th birthday last month.

Last Saturday, she is believed to have become the world’s oldest living person following the death of Emma Morano of Italy, born Nov. 29, 1899.

Brown told The Associated Press she is surprised but grateful to have lived this long. “This is what God has given me, so I have to take it — long life,” Brown said in an interview in her home in the town of Duanvale.

Brown is considered to be the oldest person in the world with credible birth documentat­ion, according to Robert Young, director of the supercente­narian research and database division at Gerontolog­y Research Group, a network of volunteer researcher­s into the world’s oldest people. Its website says she was born on March 10, 1900.

Brown has not yet been declared the world’s oldest by Guinness World Records, considered to be the official arbiter of the oldest person title, but Guinness depends heavily on Young’s group.

Young said he has met Brown and examined her birth certificat­e, which was issued by the British authoritie­s who governed Jamaica at the time of her birth. “She’s the oldest person that we have sufficient documentat­ion for at this time,” Young said.

Jamaica’s prime minister congratula­ted Brown on Twitter.

Guinness said it was researchin­g a number of candidates for the new world’s oldest person title. “It can be a uniquely complex and sometimes lengthy process,” Guinness spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Montoya said. “There is no confirmati­on of a new titleholde­r until our thorough processes are complete.”

Brown has two caregivers and spends most of the day resting in the home she shared with her son, Harland Fairweathe­r, until his unexpected death on Wednesday at age 97. Fairweathe­r, who had recently been ill but had seemed to recover, awoke saying he felt dizzy and then deteriorat­ed over the course of Wednesday morning, said caregiver Elaine McGrowder. He died at home.

Brown is able to sit up by herself and walk short distances. And while she is hard of hearing, she offered swift, complete responses about her life and family last weekend.

The secret to long life is hard work, she said: “I was a cane farmer. I would do every work myself.”

She also credited her Christian faith for her long life: “I’ve done nearly everything at the church. I spent all my time in the church. I like to sing.”

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Violet Brown

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