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"My Friends have all died, am tired of living"- The longer you live , the more tired you get - World's Oldest woman celebrates 128th birthday in Grand style as she reveals the secret of her long life.(photos)

 

"People around me have been dying. I am amazed at why I am still here after so many years.- World's oldest woman celebrates 128th birthday, reveals secret to her long life


  



Mazibuko lives in Jouberton in Klerksdorp, North West, and was born on a maize farm in the Ottosdal area.


She was the first of 12 children; only three are still alive.







Though she managed to reach the advanced age of 128, Mazibuko and her siblings never learnt to read or write due to the fact that they were born on farms and never got an opportunity to get an education


"I was born on a farm. We lived so well on the farms. There were no problems."


Due to her advanced age, Mazibuko does not remember much of her childhood. What she remembers, though, is the time when there was an infestation of locusts on the farms.  


She, however, says not all of it was disruptive to the maize crops. 


"There were ones we could catch and eat. It was like you are eating meat. We would just fry them and eat them like that, just on their own."


During her interview with News24, Mazibuko was sipping on her favourite "modern" drink – Coca Cola – but said she grew up on a totally different diet, which was devoid of soft drinks and fast food.


Growing up, she said, her diet consisted of fresh milk and wild spinach.


"Now, I eat modern food. I am used to it, but I do miss the food I grew up on."  


Marriage and children


She doesn't know at what age or year she got married, but knows she got married to an elderly widower, Stawana Mazibuko.  


"I was married to an older man. His first wife had died. He was an independent man. He had a horse carriage and cows. I would milk the cows and make butter to sell. That man treated me very well and made me forget about my life before him. I did not want for anything

The couple had seven children - only two are still alive.

Just like their mother, Mazibuko's children never went to school because she raised them on the farm.


Today, she has about 50 grandchildren and great-grandchildren. 


After getting married, she worked as a domestic worker for farm owners.


"I ironed and cleaned; the people were kind. That is the life I want to go back to. I don't know why I came to Jouberton because life is hard here.


"When you don't have money, you suffer. On the farms, we lived off the things we farmed. We would get rations as well. At the end of the year, we would get sacks of maize and we would go and sell them and make money. If I was not old, I would go back to the farms."


She doesn't remember what year her husband died – and says she moved to Jouberton from Ottosdal with her son, Tseko, just as apartheid was beginning

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