A record held by a Frenchwoman as the world’s longest living person could be fraudulent and involve an identity swap, Russian researchers have claimed in a report that has sparked widespread controversy.
Jeanne Calment died at the age of 122 years and 164 days in 1997, setting a record as the world’s most long-lived person that is still unsurpassed.
The elderly woman used to joke that God must have forgotten about her. But Russian mathematician Nikolai Zak is not convinced by her story.
In collaboration with gerontologist Valery Novoselov, he spent months analysing biographies of Jeanne Calment as well as her interviews and photos, witness testimony and the public records of the city of Arles in southern France where she lived.
“Analysing all these materials led me to conclude that Jeanne Calment’s daughter Yvonne assumed her mother’s identity,” Zak told AFP.
Zak, a member of the Moscow Society of Naturalists at Moscow State University, recently published his report called “Jeanne Calment: the Secret of Longevity” on ResearchGate, a portal connecting scientists around the world.
While opponents have slammed the report, some scientists have welcomed it and stressed the need for closer checks into longevity records.
Zak suggests that in 1934 it was not Calment’s daughter Yvonne who died of pleurisy, as official records say, but Jeanne Calment herself. Yvonne then took on her mother’s identity in order to avoid paying inheritance tax.
If that is so, the woman who died in 1997 was in fact Yvonne, and she was aged just 99.
The Russian researcher points to discrepancies between physical characteristics listed on Calment’s identity card from the 1930s and her appearance in later years.
Call for exhuming bodies
The card gives her eye colour as dark and her height as 1 metre, 52 centimetres and describes her forehead as low — all details that jar with her later appearance.
“As a doctor I always had doubts about her age,” said Novoselov, who heads the gerontology section of the Moscow Society of Naturalists.
“The state of her muscle system was different from that of her contemporaries. She could sit up without any support. She had no signs of dementia.”
After Calment’s death, scientists expressed regret that no autopsy was held to find the reasons for her exceptional longevity.
She used to talk of enjoying chocolate and port and would smoke an occasional cigarette before her health deteriorated. Fuelling suspicions, Calment ordered some of her old photos to be burnt when she became famous, the Russian researchers say.
Interviewed by AFP, French demographer and gerontologist Jean-Marie Robine, who took part in authenticating Calment’s age for Guinness World Records, said he “never had any doubt over the authenticity of the documents” of the woman.
He slammed the Russian report, saying it “never examines the facts in favour of the authenticity of the longevity of Madame Calment” and “appears to me to be defamatory against her family.”
The mayor of Arles at the time of Calment’s death, Michel Vauzelle, said that the Russians’ theory was “completely impossible and ridiculous” since Calment was monitored by a number of doctors. But others welcomed the research.
Published in Daily Times, January 3rd 2019
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