Japanese Confirmed As World’s Oldest Man Alive

Masazo Nonaka of Japan, aged 112, smiles after being awarded the Guinness World Records’ oldest male person living title in Ashoro, Hokkaido prefecture on April 10, 2018. Nonaka was born on July 25, 1905. Photo Credit: / AFP PHOTO / JIJI PRESS 

Masazo Nonaka from Japan was recognized Tuesday as the world’s oldest man at the ripe old age of 112, as his family revealed his secret: sweets and hot baths.

Nonaka, who was born on July 25, 1905 — just months before Albert Einstein published his theory of special relativity — received a certificate from Guinness World Records at home on Japan’s northern island of Hokkaido.
The supercentenarian lives with his family, which manages a hot springs inn.
“He needs a wheelchair to move but he is in good condition,” said Yuko Nonaka, his granddaughter.
“He loves eating any kinds of sweets — Japanese or western style,” she told AFP.
“He reads newspapers every day and often soaks in the hot springs.”
He has seven brothers and one sister who live nearby in the town of Ashoro on Hokkaido.
He married Hatsuno in 1931 and the couple had five children, according to Guinness World Records.
Nonaka has officially taken the title after Francisco Nunez Olivera from Spain died in February aged 113, the organization said.
Guinness World Records is currently investigating possible contenders for the title of an oldest living person as no one has been recognized since Violet Brown from Jamaica died in July 2017, aged 117.
Japan, known for the longevity of its people, has been home to several oldest title holders, including Jiroemon Kimura, who died in June 2013 at the age of 116.
There are around 68,000 people aged 100 or older in the country, the government said last year.
AFP

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