[And the birthday girl's secret to a long life is eating well, sleeping for
days on end and never getting married, according to her family.
...

'She was always a woman who fought. She was still sewing and weaving until
about two years ago. She never ceased to be active, that's why we think
she's lived so long.'

According to Miss Alvear, she also talks about the three great loves of her
life, one of which, Margarito Maldonado, was a famous revolutionary leader.]

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2739036/Mexican-woman-Leandra-Becerra-Lumbreras-oldest-person-lived-127.html

Mexican woman becomes oldest person who ever lived at 127 (but she lost her
birth certificate while moving house 40 years ago)

   - Leandra Becerra Lumbreras, of Zapopan, was born on August 31, 1887
   - Her secret to long life is eating well, sleeping and never getting
   married
   - Mother-of-five had 20 grandchildren but several of them have now died
   - She also has 73 great-grandchildren and 55 great-great-grandchildren

By Matt Roper For Mailonline
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Matt+Roper+For+Mailonline>

Published: 15:01 GMT, 31 August 2014 | Updated: 19:41 GMT, 31 August 2014

A Mexican woman has become the oldest human to have ever lived after
reaching the grand old age of 127 - but she lost her birth certificate four
decades ago, it was claimed today.

Leandra Becerra Lumbreras was said to have been born on August 31, 1887 -
the year Queen Victoria celebrated her Golden Jubilee.

She was 27 when the Second World War broke out, already a pensioner at 66
when Queen Elizabeth II ascended the British throne and 82 when man first
set foot on the moon.

*Scroll down for video*

Oldest human to have ever lived: Leandra Becerra Lumbreras was born on
August 31, 1887 - the year Queen Victoria celebrated her Golden Jubilee

And the birthday girl's secret to a long life is eating well, sleeping for
days on end and never getting married, according to her family.

Miss Lumbreras reportedly fought in the 1910-1917 Mexican Revolution as a
leader of the 'Adelitas' - women who went with their husbands to the battle
front.
The former seamstress, from the western Mexican city of Zapopan, has
already buried her five children and several of her 20 grandchildren - the
last died in 2013 aged 90.


She also has 73 great-grandchildren and 55 great-great-grandchildren.
Mexican authorities are now trying to provide a new birth certificate after
she lost the original 40 years ago while moving house.

Grandaughter Miriam Alvear, 43, told Mexico's El Horizonte
<http://elhorizonte.mx/a/noticia/511212/podria_ser_mexicana_la_mujer_mas_longeva_del_mundo>
newspaper that although she is now deaf and suffering from cataracts, Ms
Lumbreras still often entertains her family with stories from a time long
confined to history books.

They include having to flee their homes and hide in caves to escape being
forcibly recruited into the Mexican army.


Extraordinary life: The birthday girl's secret to a long life is eating
well, sleeping for days on end and never getting married, according to her
family

Her only possessions help her remember years gone by - an old silver spoon
made in 1847, a pair of gold earrings, a ring and an old pocket watch
engraved with a steam train.


She said: 'She is entirely lucid. She blows your mind with her stories from
the revolution.

'She was always a woman who fought. She was still sewing and weaving until
about two years ago. She never ceased to be active, that's why we think
she's lived so long.'

According to Miss Alvear, she also talks about the three great loves of her
life, one of which, Margarito Maldonado, was a famous revolutionary leader.

Another granddaughter, Celia Hernandez, said that she sometimes sleeps for
three days on end, but when she's awake likes to eat, talk and sing
lullabies.


She said: 'Her parents were singers. She loves to entertain her
grandchildren with the old songs they taught her.


'She's always had a good tooth, even at her old age. She has no diabetes or
hypertension so can eat as many chocolates and sweets as she likes.'

According to her family, she has already told them what she wants for her
birthday party today - beans with tortillas, even though she isn't allowed
solid food on medical advice.

Miss Lumbreras is 12 years older than Japan's Misao Okawa, currently the
oldest documented living person in the world, according to Guinness World
Records.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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