Jonah Lomu Birthday, Date of Birth

Jonah Lomu

Jonah Tali Lomu (12 May 1975 – 18 November 2015) was a New Zealand professional rugby union player. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest and most influential players in the history of the sport, and as one of the most talented sportsmen ever. Lomu is considered to have been the first true global superstar of rugby, and consequently had a huge impact on the game.

Standing 196 cm (6 ft 5 in) and weighing 125 kilograms (276 lb), Lomu was famed for his unprecedented speed, strength and agility. Exceptionally large for a wing player, he is also known as the first winger to be a physical heavyweight. For his fast and effortless style of play, Lomu was once nicknamed the "freight train in ballet shoes", and was celebrated for his ability to shrug off tackles from multiple opponents at once. He became the youngest ever All Black when he played his first international in 1994 at the age of 19 years and 45 days. Playing on the wing, Lomu finished his international career with 63 caps and 37 tries. Lomu was inducted into the International Rugby Hall of Fame on 9 October 2007, and the IRB Hall of Fame on 24 October 2011.

Born in Pukekohe to Tongan immigrants from Haʻapai, Lomu grew up between rural Tonga and South Auckland. His childhood in Auckland was marked by local gang violence, and his mother nurtured his interest in sport. Attending Wesley College, he excelled in athletics and both rugby codes before pursuing a professional career. He burst onto the international rugby scene during the 1994 Hong Kong Sevens tournament, the same year he made his fifteen-a-side debut. He was acknowledged as the top player at the 1995 World Cup for his acclaimed 4-try performance in the semi-final against England, even though New Zealand lost the final to the host South Africa. In the semi-final he bulldozed several players and ran straight over the top of full-back Mike Catt, establishing himself as one of the most talented young players of his generation. He shares with South African Bryan Habana the Rugby World Cup all-time try scoring record of 15, which he accumulated in only two tournaments.

At the height of his fame in the mid-1990s, Lomu became a globally recognised cultural icon of South Auckland and its Pasifika community. His performance at that Rugby World Cup and others that followed established him as "rugby union's biggest drawcard", just as the game turned fully professional, with him swelling attendances at any match where he appeared. Lomu's innovative position as a physically large winger was highly influential; for his impact on the gameplay of rugby union itself, he has been compared with Muhammad Ali, Don Bradman and Tiger Woods in their respective fields. He was appointed as a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to rugby, in the 2007 Queen's Birthday Honours. Lomu was known for his humility, gentle nature, and passion. He used his celebrity to support Pasifika community efforts and charities such as UNICEF, and often paid bills for his childhood friends in Māngere.

In 1995 he was diagnosed with nephrotic syndrome, a serious genetic kidney disorder, and the disease had a significant impact on his playing career and wider life. By 2003 he was on dialysis, and in 2004 underwent a kidney transplant that saved his life. He turned his energy to being a Kidney Kids NZ ambassador, encouraging children with similar afflictions to seek treatment. After a period of hiatus, he returned to play domestically rather than internationally. Lomu played for several domestic New Zealand provincial or Super Rugby sides, and late in his career played club rugby in both Wales and France. These included the Auckland Blues, with whom he won the inaugural 1996 Super 12 Final with, Chiefs and Hurricanes, and Counties Manukau, Wellington, and later North Harbour and the Cardiff Blues. His illness forced his retirement from professional rugby in 2007 at the age of 32.

After returning from abroad, Lomu died unexpectedly on 18 November 2015 at home in Auckland. The cause was a heart attack associated with his kidney condition. His death saw widespread tributes to him and his family, including condolences from Queen Elizabeth II and a haka performed by the pupils of his boyhood primary school. The New Zealand Parliament passed a national motion in honour of his life.

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Birthday, Date of Birth
Monday, May 12, 1975
Place of Birth
Auckland
Age
50
Star Sign

The May 12, 1975 was a Monday under the star sign of . It was the 131 day of the year. President of the United States was Gerald R. Ford.

If you were born on this day, you are 50 years old. Your last birthday was on the Monday, May 12, 2025, 125 days ago. Your next birthday is on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, in 239 days. You have lived for 18,388 days, or about 441,321 hours, or about 26,479,314 minutes, or about 1,588,758,840 seconds.

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12th of May 1975 News

News as it appeared on the front page of the New York Times on May 12, 1975

Cultural Arrogance

Date: 12 May 1975

By Anthony Lewis

Anthony Lewis

Anthony Lewis comment hails Sydney Schanberg articles in NY Times describing forced evacuation of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, following takeover by Communists; discusses Amer correspondents difficulties in seeing Indochina war through non-Western eyes and holds cultural arrogance of top Amer officials in assuming that Amer way of life could prevail was major factor in disaster in S Vietnam; cites Prof Alexander Woodside's view that Vietnamese decision making is based on historical precedent, while Amer's seek to avoid thinking in historical terms and that this split was factor in US folly in Vietnam (M)

Full Article

Judge Voids Order To Editor to Write Antigun Editorials

Date: 13 May 1975

Judge Richard F Connors, who ordered Alfredo Izaguirre Horta, editor and pres of El Mundo de Hoy, who was convicted of weapons charge to editorialize against use of illegal hand guns, drops that part of sentence on May 12; Horta repts he had already run 1 anti-hand gun editorial, and will write others voluntarily; Connors continues 3-yr's probation for Horta and Antonio Angel Parajon, paper's photographer; Connors acted after criticism by Gov Byrne who wrote to Chief Justice Richard J Hughes (S)

Full Article

Three on WABC-TV Honored For Willowbrook Program

Date: 13 May 1975

Robert F Kennedy journalism awards to Geraldo Rivera, Martin Berman and Peter Lance (WABC), Mike Masterson (Hot Springs Sentinel Record), Loretta Schwartz (Phila Magazine) and Terence Gurley (WWVA) (S)

Full Article

Papers Seek to Set Distributors' Ceiling Prices

Date: 13 May 1975

Los Angeles Times exec vice pres and gen mgr Robert E Nelson, and Birmingham (Ala) News asst gen mgr William C Greene testify before Sen Antitrust Subcom considering repeal of fair trade legislation, that newspapers anywhere should be permitted to set maximum prices that independent distributors may charge; basic argument by both witnesses was that if newspapers were not allowed to set maximum price, distributors would increase price in populated areas and stop serving less populous ones; Sen Roman L Hruska (Nebraska) asks whether it could be shown that more papers failed in states without fair trade laws than in states with them (M)

Full Article

U.S. Newsmen Visit Soviet Space Center

Date: 13 May 1975

By CHRISTOPHER S. WREN Special to The New York Times

Christopher WREN

USSR permits foreign newsmen to visit main flight control center, Kaliningrad, for 1st time in preparation for joint Apollo Soyuz Project; center described; tech dir Albert V Milstein says center was built in '70 and was 1st used on manned flight to direct flight of Soyuz 12; center is believed to handle unmanned Cosmos missions; Milstein says press corps will not be allowed in center during actual mission; Amer technicians already installed at center in preparation for flight; map (M)

Full Article

Israel Bars Publication of a Manuscript Disclosing Secret Remarks of Kissinger

Date: 13 May 1975

By TERENCE SMITH Special to The New York Times

Terence Special

Premier Rabin has blocked publication of book that reptdly contains secret minutes of conversations between Sec Kissinger and Israeli mins in which Kissinger allegedly made disparaging remarks about leaders of Egypt, Syria, USSR and other countries; reptdly told Cabinet that Kissinger would have to resign and that Israeli-US relations would be seriously damaged if material was made public; sources say Govt censor blocked publication of boook on ground that it might threaten flow of US arms and aid to Israel (M)

Full Article

News Summary and Index; The Major Events of the Day International National Metropolitan

Date: 13 May 1975

Full Article

News Summary and Index; The Major Events of the Day International National Metropolitan

Date: 13 May 1975

Full Article

News Summary and Index; The Major Events of the Day International National Metropolitan

Date: 12 May 1975

Full Article

News Summary and Index; The Major Events of the Day International National Metropolitan

Date: 12 May 1975

Full Article