Ventersdorp granny, born in 1800s, could be the oldest living woman
Martha Hester Sehao is, to the Potchefstroom Herald’s knowledge, the oldest living person on earth.
The oldest living person on earth, Martha Hester Sehao. Photo: Dustin Wetdewich/Potchefstroom Herald
In a dusty extension outside Ventersdorp, she has made history by still being alive after 121 years.
Martha Hester Sehao is, to the Potchefstroom Herald’s knowledge, the oldest living person on earth. She was born on 9 January 1897, 121 years and four months ago.
READ MORE: ‘World’s oldest person’ dies in Japan at 117
Various sources identify the Japanese woman Chiyo Miyako as the oldest person alive at the age of 117, but Martha’s identification document proves that she is four years older than Miyako.
Martha can’t remember exactly where she was born, but her daughter, Miriam Sehawa, says her supercentenarian mother (someone who has reached the age of 110) grew up somewhere on a farm outside Ventersdorp.
Martha had seven children, four of whom are still alive. She has eight grandchildren, but, surprisingly, no great-grandchildren to her knowledge.
Martha and Miriam have been living in Extension 8 in Ventersdorp for more than five years, but it is only now that she has captured the attention of the community.
A group of residents in Ventersdorp who regularly clean the streets in the extensions noticed Martha while cleaning outside her house one day. When they heard how old she was, they decided to have a cake baked for her.
The baker from Mikstok Bakery was the one who notified a correspondent of the Potchefstroom Herald about Martha, knowing that this is big news. If Martha is really 121 years old, this should be a world record.
The Potchefstroom Herald travelled to Ventersdorp with only an address that doesn’t exist on Google Maps. If it wasn’t for the J.B. Marks municipal official, Sydney Mnyakama, who knows Ventersdorp quite well, we would probably never have found Martha.
The interview itself was also a challenge since Martha doesn’t speak, she only smiles, and Miriam doesn’t understand English or Afrikaans.
Sydney helped us a lot by translating the interview for us. After every question, Martha looked as excited and gave a big, toothless smile. At times, it looked as if she wanted to jump up and say something, but her age limited her to just smiles.
Martha cannot walk anymore and, with only a pension as a source of income, there is no way she can afford a wheelchair. Miriam stays home to look after her mother, but this is not easy, as her body is frail and her bones brittle. Like a porcelain doll, it looks as if she could break at any moment.
This is why it was quite a shock to hear that Martha’s only health issue is high blood pressure and that she doesn’t visit the clinic all that often.
Despite her age and being possibly the oldest person on earth, Martha has a lot of life left in her. With her big, pink slippers and her crystal eyes, this old Ventersdorp resident has just made world history.
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