
Ho Van Lang fled civilisation at the end of the Vietnam War in 1972 when a US bomb killed his mother and two siblings.

“Lang was probably the most adorable human I have ever met in my life, he just doesn’t know what is good or bad.” Yet despite his intellectual inability, Mr cerezo says Lang is one of the most peaceful people he’s met. “If I asked Lang to stab someone with a knife, he would do it without thinking and that person could die.” Most people know what is good or bad in life, but my brother doesn’t. He doesn’t know the difference between good and bad.

“If I asked Lang to beat someone, he would do it severely. So his brain is just like a baby,” his brother said. “Lang has spent his whole life in the jungle. “I can confirm that Lang has never had the minimum sexual desire and his reproductive instinct has never shown its head in any of its many facets.”Ĭredited as a “baby in a man’s body”, Lang’s brother, Tri, said “Lang doesn’t understand many basic social concepts”.


“More surprising still is that today, despite being able to distinguish between men and women, he still doesn’t know the essential difference between them,” said Mr Cerezo. Up until he was found Lang never knew the existence of the female sex, as his father never told him. Lang’s isolation from the world has proven critical in his lack of social adaptation he cannot understand Vietnamese, has no concept of time other than from the sun, and struggles to understand the concept of electricity. Lang fashions his jungle attire out of these leaves. They built wood houses and sourced water from rivers, using a variety of jungle delicacies for dinner, including fruit, honey and a host of meats in the form of monkey, snake, lizard and frog.Īlong with his brother, Lang spent his life eating and living off the jungle for four decades until 2013, when locals found the family, alerted authorities and forced them to re-enter civilisation.Īccording to Alvaro Cerezo, who tracked Lang and his family down in November 2015, Lang’s father suffers from a “profound phobia of returning as he did not believe that the Vietnam War was over”. Lang’s father, an army veteran, decided to flee with his two sons after a US bomb killed his wife and two of their children. Lang spent much of his life in the deepest jungles of Vietnam, in the Tay Tra district of Quang Ngai province, after his father, Ho Van Thanh, 85, fled civilisation during the Vietnam War in 1972. DRESSED in tree bark and leaves while munching on a rat caught by a complicated jungle trap, this guy looks a little different than Alexander Skarsgård, the Swedish actor who is stealing hearts in the new Tarzan movie.īut this “real life Tarzan” is credited with skills that are “superhuman”.īuilding tree houses, fashioning tools out of discarded war bombs and catching a bat quicker than you can Google, Ho Van Lang, 44, spent 40 years living like a “slave” in isolation in the jungle.Īnd now, Lang has been forced to re-enter civilisation despite his love affair with the wilderness.
