2025-05-26
37 分钟How often do you get to hear a former president speak about the nature of love like this?
I have to be grateful for life.
Grateful that I am alive.
Because I have Lucia by my side, who helps me to live.
Love when you're young, it's a bonfire.
It's a whirlwind.
Love, when you're an old man, is a sweet habit.
For that, I feel grateful.
José Mujica, or Pepe, as he prefers to be called, burned bright in life.
When he died earlier this month at the age of 89, the people of Uruguay came out in force.
For eight kilometres,
the streets were lined with people wanting to pay their respects as his coffin passed by.
You're listening to Lives Less Ordinary from the BBC World Service.
I'm Andrea Kennedy.
Pepe Mujica led the most extraordinary life, bringing landmark changes to his country,
making headlines for shunning presidential palaces and cars,
for his single-storey cottage and old clapped-out VW.
As a younger man, he'd earned himself a world record for the largest ever prison escape.
And the reason he ended up in prison is that before that,
he was a leader of an urban guerrilla movement which took up arms to bring down a government.