‘Real-life Tarzan’ who lived in the jungle for 40 years dies of cancer aged 52

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A ‘real-life Tarzan’ who lived in the Vietnamese jungle for 40 years has died of liver cancer aged 52 – eight years after he returned to the ‘civilised world’.

Ho Van Lang succumbed to the illness last Monday after surviving 41 years in the jungle with his father who fled into the wilderness in 1972 when US bombing during the Vietnam War killed half his family.

The pair re-established contact with Vietnamese society in 2013 and believed the Vietnam War was still raging on when they entered a village and sought medical help for Lang’s father Ho Van Thanh.

After 2013, Lang began living a relatively modern lifestyle, but some friends and observers believe the stresses and poor diet of te ‘civilised’ world had a detrimental effect on his health.

Lang’s friend Alvaro Cerezo said that living a ‘modern’ life probably had fatal consequences for him after he started eating processed foods and sometimes drinking alcohol.

Cerezo said: ‘I’m so sad to see him go, but for me his passing is also a liberation because I know he was suffering in the last months.

‘He was a beautiful human being, to forget him will be impossible, I will miss him every day.

‘But I didn’t like seeing him living in civilisation. I was always concerned that he and his body wouldn’t be able to handle such a drastic change.’

The father-son duo lived for decades in the forest of what is now known as the Tra Bong District before they were found by locals looking for firewood.

Authorities say Lang’s older brother Ho Van Tri encouraged the pair to return to civilisation when Thanh’s health began to deteriorate in 2013. He died of an unknown cause in 2017.

The family elder Thanh once lived a normal life with his family in the hamlet of Tra Kem before the Vietnam war.

After fleeing, the pair survived in the wilderness by foraging fruit and cassava from the forest and planting corn.

They wore loincloths made out of tree bark, and lived in a timber hut raised five metres above the ground.

When the foragers saw the two ‘jungle men’ from a distance acting abnormally, they alerted local authorities.

Officials set up a team to track them down, and found them in August 2013 after a five-hour search.

The father could speak a little of the minority Cor language, but the son knew only a few words.

The pair then underwent medical check-ups as a first step to being reintegrated into mainstream society.

Lang made an emotional return to his former home in July 2016.

Lang had lived a remarkable life and made headlines across the globe – but his friend Alvaro Cerezo, an explorer who returned to the jungle with Lang to live there for a week together, believes discovering ‘modern life’ probably had fatal consequences for real-life Tarzan.

Cerezo said: ‘I’m so sad to see him go, but for me, his passing is also a liberation because I know he was suffering in the last months.

‘He was a beautiful human being, to forget him will be impossible, I will miss him every day.

‘But I didn’t like seeing him living in civilisation. I was always concerned that he and his body wouldn’t be able to handle such a drastic change.

‘He had spent all his life living in the jungle and then came to live in the “civilised world” where he started eating processed foods and sometimes even drinking alcohol.’

Cerezo met Lang two years later through his work with Docastaway – an organisation that helps people who want to escape from civilisation and spend a few days or weeks completely alone on a desert island.

During their friendship, Cerezo recorded on camera some of Lang’s most vulnerable, emotional and beautiful moments, including his time in the jungle, adapting to civilised life and returning to the wild.

Cerezo also wrote a book about Lang’s life and has now compiled a montage of footage he took when the pair lived together deep in the jungle.

He said: ‘Two years after he was brought back to civilisation, I went to look for Ho Van Lang at his village to see if he would teach me some new survival techniques that I could apply on the desert islands.

‘I always say that the best survival “teachers” are to be found among the tribes.’

Cerezo added: ‘But after spending less than a day with him I realised he was one of the most endearing people I have ever met.

‘The connection between us was immediate because Lang never imagined someone would be interested in his survival skills, and he was so happy to show me them all.

‘He got so excited that he decided to take me deep into the jungle and show me the place he had lived all his life.

‘We spent one week living at his jungle-home in the same way he had during the past four decades.

‘He was the most fascinating person I ever met and extremely sweet at the same time. When we were surviving together in the jungle, everything that would take me hours to achieve, he could do it in seconds.

‘He was a little kid with the skills of a superhuman.’


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