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Japanese Woman Nears Title as World’s Oldest—Her Story

Tomiko Itooka, a Japanese woman, will soon become the oldest living person in the world at 116 years old. Maria Branyas, who was 117 years old, passed away a few days ago in Spain.

With her birthday confirmed as May 23, 1908, by the US-based Gerontology Research Group, Itooka is ranked #1 on the World Supercentenarian Rankings List.

Itooka, a former climber and adventure seeker, made news at the age of 100 for her level of fitness as she ascended Japan’s Ashiya Shrine without the use of a cane, mesmerizing onlookers.

She moved to a nursing home in Ashiya, Hyogo in 2019, by that time she could move independently but now she needs a wheelchair. When she was 100, she could easily move without any cane support as we could see when she climbed up the Ashiya Shrine.

The Gerontology Research Group (GRG) shared a post on X (formerly known as Twitter) announcing that Tomiko Itooka of Ashiya, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan, had become the newest candidate to be ranked world’s oldest person alive.

Ikoota was born on May 23, 1908, in Osaka, and she currently lives in Ashiya, a city in the Hyogo province of western Japan. As per GRG, Itooka is the second eldest daughter among three siblings. 

When she was born, long-distance radio messages were first broadcast from the Eiffel Tower and the Wright brothers made their public flights in Europe and America. 

Itooka had always loved sports and adventure and she played at the volleyball club when she was a student. She completed her graduation from Osaka Jogakuin Junior and Senior High School. 

In her 70s, her love for adventure continued as she made an impressive climb to Japan’s 3,067-metre Mount Ontake, wearing a pair of sneakers rather than hiking boots. 

She married when she was 20 years old; she has two daughters and two sons. During World War II, she took her husband’s responsibility for managing a textile factory in South Korea. 

According to the research group, she ran a Japanese office on her own while raising her children. Her husband passed away in 1979 and then she independently lived in his hometown in Nara province for nearly a decade.

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Source: Business Standard

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