Tuti Tojiboyevna Yusupova was an Uzbekistani longevity claimant.
Background
She was born and died in the same village, but lived in four states: the Khanate of Khiva, the Khorezm People"s Soviet Republic, the Soviet Union and independent Uzbekistan. Her father"s name was Tojiboy (Тожибой) and her mother"s name was Uljon (Улжон).
Career
At the alleged age of 7009425204640000000♠134 years, 270 days, she was claimed to be the oldest living person in the world and oldest person ever, her claimed age exceeding that of the currently recognised claimant Jeanne Louise Calment by 12 years. She had a younger brother. Yusupova worked at the family farm since she was 9 years old.
"During World War I, I had already had two children," she said.
"I experienced the burden of those times. I remember it very well, and the period of collectivization.
What can I say, our people suffered greatly. But I have never been afraid of difficulties.
I was busy plowing fields, paving ditches, picking cotton or selling fertilizer.
I was always working and was always in motion. Perhaps that is why there was no need to see a doctor."
Her children, Snezhana (d 1984) and Jamal (d 1956), both predeceased her. She had claimed her secret to a long life is to be honest, hardworking, and helpful.
In 2008, she was awarded the Shukhrat medal for being over 100 years of age in Uzbekistan.
Reuters reported that her age was uncovered in 2009 by Safar Hakimov, the ruling Uzbekistan Liberal Democratic Party"s local chairman in Tortkol, Karakalpakstan when researching centenarians as part of the plans for the country"s independence anniversary. If her age is correct, she would be more than a decade older than the oldest verified person, French woman Jeanne Calment, who died in 1997, aged 122 years, 164 days.
In 2010, a documentary was filmed about her, Witness to Three Centuries (Russian: Свидетельница трех веков). Known as "Tuti-Momo," she was deeply respected in her village of To‘rtko‘l.
"In the run-up to visits, weddings and other events, we always come to her and ask for blessings", said village chairman Ikrom Bekniyozov.
"lieutenant is a tradition that has developed over the years. You can"t have something more unique in your village than having the oldest person in the world there." Another villager, Gulbahor Umarov, said "This house is full of guests. People just want to visit Momo, talk to her, to learn the secrets of longevity.
Representatives of the World Health Organization came to visit." She had more than 100 descendants during her lifetime.
"I lost count of grandchildren, great-grandchildren, great-great-grandchildren", she said before her birthday in March 2015. "I just say, "May they be healthy!" Sometimes I confuse their names, but that"s okay, as long as they are healthy,"
She died on 28 March 2015, four days before Misao Okawa, the oldest verified living person at the time.
After her funeral, her birth certificate and passport were declared conclusive evidence by Baxadir Yangibayev, Chairman of the Council of Ministers in the Republic of Karakalpakstan, where she lived and died. He said he would pass this information on to Guinness World Records.
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Quotations:
"During World War I, I had already had two children,". "I lost count of grandchildren, great-grandchildren, great-great-grandchildren".