[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

27003: Wharram (news) THE SECRET OF AVION, 125 YEARS OLD (fwd)






Granma
International
English Edition

 S C I E N C E   A N D   T E C H N O L O G Y


Havana. December 23, 2005

THE SECRET OF AVION, 125 YEARS OLD
Laughing 100 times a day

BY ANGELA ORAMAS CAMERO?Special for Granma International?
PHOTO: DARIEL REBOREDO VAZQUEZ

BENITO Martínez Abogán, apparently the oldest man in the world, lives in
Cuba. He was born in Haiti on June 19, 1880, and has lived through the end
and beginning of two millennia.

Laughing 100 times a day



He lived his childhood and adolescence during the19th century; part of his
youth and old age in the 20th century, and now he?s ready to ?give it all he
?s got? for the 21st century. He loves his nickname, Avión (Airplane),
because he was always so speedy working in the fields, and because, as he
says: ?There?s no other man who?s come as far as I have.? He enjoys
conversation, although he was brief with us on this occasion, given that he
was rushing to get ready for a cockfight. ?That?s not permitted,? I told
him, and he fiercely defended himself.

What else do you enjoy doing?

?That?s not something you ask a man: women, girls...women! I had a woman
here and another in my bohío, but I never got married... That?s something I
have to think about.?

I comment, ?They tell me you spend time at the retirement home with a
girlfriend you found there, and that sometimes you go out into the country,
but I know what you do out there is witchcraft, Avión...?

He laughs, his eyes sparkling, and replies, ?It?s not witchcraft, you?re
wrong, that?s my religion; I throw little stones and know about things, and
predict the future.?

It?s probably voodoo that he practices, and I?m thinking that when he
surprises me by speaking in Creole, his native language, which he has never
forgotten. ?I already told you,? he said. ?If you don?t understand what I?m
saying, too bad... I speak Cuban, Spanish and my people?s language.? Ah, he?
s trilingual.

Avión is definitely laughing at me; meanwhile he is defying Methuselah ? the
Biblical character who died at the age of 979 ? and the 120 Years Club, and
asks for Dr. Selman, who leads the club, to change its name: ?Put mine
instead. I?m already 125 years old, and nothing hurts, not even a
callous...well, my ankle hurts, but the doctor gives me a little medicine
and Avión is all better... I keep fighting cocks, and I always win...and I
celebrate everything with two shots of rum and smoke a cigar, and that?s
it... I don?t smoke any more, or drink any more until the next fight.?

Just as so many Haitians have done through the centuries, Benito Martínez
Abogán left his native land for Cuba in 1925, carrying a bundle of clothes,
misery and illiteracy. He was born on a Monday, at 4 a.m. in the mountains
of Caballón, the same day that one of his sisters died of hunger. The year,
month and day of his birth are recorded on his ID showing him to be a
permanent resident of Cuba, and he adds, ?I am the son of Negrita and Somín.
My last name is Abogán, but here people gave me the surname Martínez and
called me Avión, because I work fast, like a plane flies.?

Ever since his arrival in eastern Cuba, with hoe and machete in hand, he
worked from sunup to sundown in the sugarcane fields. For a brief time he
worked on the farm of Angel Castro, in Birán, when Fidel had not yet been
born. ?I left because Angel was stingy.? He then began a long journey,
barefoot, until he settled down definitively in Ciego de Avila, a central
Cuban province. The first job he had there was digging a ditch one meter
deep, with pick and shovel, as the beginning of construction on the Central
Highway for a miserable wage. ?That was under Machado, a very bad president;
I don?t want to remember anything about him. I had to live all alone in the
mountains; I didn?t known how to read or write and had to cure myself with
herbs because I couldn?t pay for a doctor. I love Fidel, who sends doctors
for free to Haiti to care for the poor, and that?s why I light a candle to
Santa Barbara and pray every night for Fidel?s health, and for her to
protect him.?

Outside the city, right on La Gloria farm in the rural community of Vila,
close to the town of Vicente and a cooperative, Avión has his two homes. One
is his old, humble hut, in which I suppose he has his bundle of mysteries
hidden away; nearby is his new one, built of cement and plaster, where he
has the basic comforts of modern life, which the provincial government gave
to him in usufruct. Both houses may be reached by a winding road that goes
through a forest of mango, avocado, orange, lemon, coconut and cherry trees
that he himself planted years ago. He also planted for his own consumption
sweet potato, plantain, arrowroot, malanga, coffee (he is an avid coffee
drinker), rice, and various vegetables, along with medicinal herbs, ?for
curing myself with holy herbs, liana, honey and lemon, and it gets rid of my
cough and everything else.?

He raises pigs in one yard and chickens in another. In his garden, the
mariposa flowers and night jasmine perfume my friend?s paradisiacal home: ?I
don?t cook anymore, because I only know how to do it with charcoal and
firewood... I don?t know how to cook the modern way.? His home is now cared
for by an employee of the municipal government.

All of his life, until very recently, he went barefoot, ?but now I put shoes
on to visit the retirement home, to go out and take them off in the hut, to
talk to people who come here from Havana.? He never married, and has no
children or other family members in Cuba.

He no longer has the rows of white, healthy teeth that he had 10 years ago.
But his strength and lucidity are still amazing. Once in a while, he uses a
cane for walking, but if it?s a matter of escaping from the retirement home
to go dance during carnival time, ?I leave the cane hidden under my bed,? he
says. He doesn?t need eyeglasses, either, and is not hard of hearing like
many 100-year-olds are; he displays an enigmatic longevity that has left
almost no traces on his skin ? his face is barely wrinkled. He is an
extraordinarily nice and joyful man.

Except for this Haitian-Cuban, I have never known anybody else to wear such
a perennial smile, and such a mischievous and noble expression. When I asked
him the secret of his longevity and the source of his health, he described
the poverty that surrounded his long life, for more than a century, which
forced him to live as a vegetarian in the mountains, far from the noise and
stress of the city. And regarding his pleasant personality: ?I get along
well with everybody,? which has made it possible for him ?not to have any
enemies and to be happy here.? He eats just a little bit of white and dark
meat: ?pork is what I eat the most, and I plant arrowroot, which is good for
young and old, ñame (a type of malanga), malanga, squash; all kinds of salad
and lots of fruit, that?s what I eat.? However, he attributes his strong
physical and mental health to the joy of living that has always accompanied
him. I recall having read the Chinese sages of ancient times aspired to
longevity by leading tranquil, healthy and happy lives with the holy recipe
of laughing 100 times a day, something that Avión knows how to do very well:
?I?m happy, and I don?t get angry.?

The Ciego de Avila resident, who is older than Schigechigo Izumi of Japan ?
who lived to be 120 years and 237 days and was registered in the Guinness
Book of Records ? has three wishes: ?They?re more or less fulfilled, but I
still have not gone to my homeland Haiti. I would like to go and come back
to Cuba; the mattress Fidel sent is small, too small for me and a woman; and
I still haven?t seen Fidel, my friend, in person.? I ask him why he says
Fidel is his friend if he never met him. ?You don?t understand. He sends a
doctor for me, a mattress; he had them build a new house for me, with a
television, refrigerator and a lady who takes care of the house, who cleans,
cooks and takes care of me...Fidel is Avión?s friend, he knows about me and
has Avión looked after, but I would like to thank him in person.?

DOCTORS? OPINIONS

Three doctors at the Camilo Cienfuegos Geriatrics Complex in Ciego de Avila
look after Benito Martínez Abogán?s health, and believe that one day that
human treasure should be entered in the Guinness Book of Records, a matter
that depends on a scientific test to give precise evidence of his age, and a
resource they don?t have in that province. They are Doctors Noel López
Viamontes, first-grade specialist in general comprehensive medicine, with a
degree in geriatrics; Héctor Reboredo Rodríguez, first-grade specialist in
geriatrics and gerontology and head of the provincial health authority?s
Older Adult and Social Assistance Department; and Armando Falcón, geriatrist
and specialist in alternative medicines like acupuncture, and a scholar of
traditional Chinese medicine.

How much of this centarian?s story is true?

Dr. Reboredo Rodríguez responds: ?There is no doubt about his good genetic
heredity, and the isolated conditions under which he has lived a good part
of his life ? bucolic, far from stress and pollution, where he himself
harvested produce and lived as a vegetarian ? has an influence on his
current good health. Sometimes he eats pork and pork fat. He drinks alcohol,
but just a little bit, during festive or ritual events; he drinks coffee and
he doesn?t smoke. I have never seen him depressed. He always works very
hard, a lot, and under the sun.

How is his health?

?Right now his health is good. He suffers from heart failure, which is under
strict medical treatment, and has never shown symptoms of pneumonia. When I
discovered him, during a census to find out how many centenarians lived in
Ciego, we found that he had curvature of the spine, an inguinal left hernia
and malformation of the feet after having gone barefoot for more than 100
years. But Noel is the one who can tell you more about Benito?s current
state of health, given he is the one who directly attends to him.?

?To sum up, I would say that we are in the presence of a centenarian with
biological wellbeing. We provide for him a program of medical and
painstaking attention, which means it is very possible that he will continue
to live with the same quality as the present. Avión is an example for other
elderly people in the country and in the world, given that he himself
created a healthy lifestyle and correct habits: that?s where his
satisfactory longevity comes from. And, of course, he has simple irritations
like stomach problems, given that he himself knows which medicinal plant to
use.?

Dr. Falcón adds, in that respect, ?I?ve noticed that with the moxa or
Artemisa plant (a small cigar used in traditional Chinese medicine that
tones up, and removes humidity and cold), he relieves his rheumatic pains; I
also provide him with acupuncture and with very good results, especially on
his ankles, as well as massages, infra-red, etcetera. Avión says that the
medicine and little cigar are wonder cures.?

Is he more than 120 years old?

?According to his immigration documents, he is now 125. But the scientific
test to prove that is not possible here in Ciego. Likewise, we suggest that
an investigation should be done involving doctors who collaborate with us,
in Haiti, in his birthplace, where perhaps the descendant of a brother or
sister of his still lives, or a document or book could turn up that would
answer any doubts. Somewhere in Haiti, there must be a record of his
departure for Cuba in 1925, his date of birth and other identification
information.?

Nevertheless, the respectful scientific manner and the caution not to offer
an exact date implies that these doctors are convinced that this
Haitian-Cuba is the oldest man in Cuba and perhaps in the world, as my
colleague, Joaquín Oramas, stated in the last February 2005 edition of
Granma International, in an article titled ?Unprecedented Gathering of
Centenarians,? an international event held in Havana sponsored by the 120
Years Club, a member of the Caribbean Medical Association directed by Doctor
Eugenio Selman-Housein.

The Cuban population reached 11,241,291 on October 12, 2005 (and more than
2,500 are centenarians). Men comprise 50.03%, just a little more than women,
who make up 49.97%, and life expectancy is 77 years. The average age is 35.1
years. Eighty percent of those who currently live on the island die when
they are older than 60. A study carried out on a group of Cuban centenarians
shows that 80% of them have never smoked, and the majority have not consumed
alcoholic drinks. Likewise, the Cuban population could be the oldest in
Latin America by 2025, with more than 25% of Cubans over 60 years old.



Editor-in-chief: Lázaro Barredo Medina / Editor: Gabriel Molina Franchossi
HOSPEDAJE: Teledatos-Cubaweb
Granma International: http://www.granma.cu/
Also at: http://granmai.cubaweb.com/
http://www.granmai.cubasi.cu

© Copyright. 1996-2005. All rights reserved. GRANMA INTERNATIONAL/ONLINE
EDITION. Cuba.