Sister Inah Canabarro Lucas, a soccer-loving nun from Brazil who was believed to be the oldest person in the world and whose longevity had been celebrated by Pope Francis, died on Wednesday, her religious congregation, the Irmãs Teresianas Brasil, said.
She was 116 years old and would have turned 117 in a few more weeks, according to the Irmãs Teresianas, which translates to “Teresian Sisters.” She had been living at a retirement home in the city of Porto Alegre in southern Brazil.
In a social media post, her congregation gave thanks for her life of service and dedication, and asked the Lord to “welcome her into his infinite love.” Irmãs Teresianas did not give a cause of death, but her family told the Brazilian television station RBS TV that she had died of old age.
While her sight and hearing diminished toward the end of her life, she avoided surgery until a cataract procedure when she was 106, Sister Rita Fernandes Barbosa, the congregation’s provincial coordinator, told the station earlier this year.
In January, Guinness World Records declared Sister Inah the world’s oldest living person after the death of Tomiko Itooka, a Japanese woman who was born before the start of World War I and the sinking of the Titanic. She was also 116.
In the year Sister Inah was born, the Model T was introduced by Henry Ford. Insulin had not yet been discovered, and the world’s first demonstration of a television was still several years away.
Sister Inah’s exact birthday has been a source of debate and confusion. A registry had listed it as June 8, 1908, the date recognized by Guinness World Records and LongeviQuest, which keeps a database of supercentenarians, people who are 110 or older.
But her family and friends have said that Sister Inah was born on May 27, 1908, in São Francisco de Assis in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. They said that her parents had traveled a great distance and several days to register her birth.
As a child, she was so thin that her parents feared that she would not survive, her nephew, Cleber Canabarro, who is in his 80s, told The Associated Press in January. Her great-grandfather was a well-known general who had taken up arms during the turbulent period after Brazil declared independence from Portugal in the 19th century, The A.P. reported.
As a teenager, Sister Inah followed her spiritual calling and then took her vows as a nun in Uruguay before returning to Brazil to teach Portuguese and math.
When Sister Inah turned 110, she received an apostolic blessing from Pope Francis, who died on April 21 at 88. She was believed to have been the second oldest nun after Sister André, a French nun who lived through two world wars and the 1918 influenza pandemic and survived Covid-19. She died at 118 in 2023.
Sister Inah’s faith and health were not her only enduring distinctions. She was also known for her allegiance to the soccer team Sport Club Internacional in Porto Alegre, known as Inter, which was founded in 1909, the year after her birth.
For her milestone birthdays, she regularly donned team patches and scarves and was presented with jerseys. The team paid tribute to her on social media.
With Sister Inah’s death, LongeviQuest recognized Ethel Caterham, a British woman from Surrey, England, as the oldest person in the world.
So how did Sister Inah reach 116? Her Catholic faith, she told The A.P.
“I’m young, pretty and friendly,” she said, “all very good, positive qualities that you have, too.”
Jonathan Wolfe contributed reporting.
A South Carolina man intentionally ran over three people on Sullivan's Island on Thursday afternoon,…
Voters in Australia head to the polls on Saturday, the third major U.S. ally after…
More companies are starting to warn that they will have to pass on higher costs…
Perez was born in New Jersey to parents of Cuban heritage and raised mostly in…
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Former college football coach Nick Saban introduced…
The Trump administration has floated a plan to trim about $6 billion from the budget…