Soccer-loving nun from Brazil tops list of world's oldest living person at nearly 117
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MIAMI (AP) — A soccer-loving nun from Brazil is believed to have become the world’s oldest living person at nearly 117 following the recent death of a woman from Japan.

Sister Inah Canabarro was so skinny growing up that many didn’t think she would survive childhood, said LongeviQuest, an organization that tracks supercentenarians around the globe.

The group released a statement on Saturday declaring the wheelchair-bound nun the world’s oldest person validated by early life records.

In a video shot by the organization last February, the smiling Canabarro can be seen cracking jokes, sharing miniature paintings she used to make of wildflowers and reciting the Hail Mary prayer.

The secret to longevity? Her Catholic faith, she says.

Video below: Sister Inah Canabarro learns she is the oldest living person in the world.

“I’m young, pretty and friendly — all very good, positive qualities that you have too,” the Teresian nun tells the visitors to her retirement home in the southern Brazilian city of Porto Alegre.

Canabarro was born on June 8, 1908 to a large family in southern Brazil, according to LongeviQuest. Her great-grandfather was a famed Brazilian general who took up arms during the turbulent period following Brazil’s independence from Portugal in the 19th century.

She took up religious work still a teenager and spent two years in Montevideo, Uruguay, before moving to Rio de Janeiro and eventually closer to home in southern Brazil.

For her 110th birthday, she was honored by Pope Francis. She is the second oldest nun ever documented, after Lucile Randon, who was the world’s oldest person until her death in 2023 at the age of 118.

Local soccer club Inter — which was founded after Canabarro’s birth — celebrates every year the birthday of its oldest fan with a cake and balloons in the team’s red and white colors.

“White or black, rich or poor, whoever you are, Inter is the team of the people,” she says in one video posted on social media celebrating her 116th birthday with the club’s president.

Canabarro took the title of the oldest living person following the death of Japan’s Tomiko Itooka in December, according to LongeviQuest. She now ranks as the 20th oldest documented person to have ever lived, a list topped by Frenchwoman Jeanne Calment, who died in 1997 at the age of 122, according to LongeviQuest.

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