They call him 'Twenty-Four.' Yoandri  Hernandez Garrido's nickname comes from the six perfectly formed  fingers on each of his hands and the six impeccable toes on each foot. Hernandez  is proud of his extra digits and calls them a blessing, saying they set  him apart and enable him to make a living by scrambling up palm trees  to cut coconuts and posing for photographs in this eastern Cuban city  popular with tourists.
'He was very impressed when he saw my fingers,' said Hernandez, who is the only one in his family to be born with extra digits. In  a part of the world where people's physical traits are often the basis  for nicknames - even unflattering ones like 'fatty' or 'shorty' -  'veinticuatro' ('twenty-four' in English) is not an insult but rather a  term of endearment, and Hernandez, now 37, said his uniqueness has made  him a popular guy.
He has a 10-year-old son with a woman who now lives in Havana, and his current girlfriend is expecting his second child. 'Since  I was young, I understood that it was a privilege to have 24 digits.  Nobody has ever discriminated against me for that,' he said. 'On the  contrary, people admire me and I am very proud. I have a million  friends, I live well.' Nevertheless, it occasionally caused confusion growing up.
'One day when I was in primary  school, a teacher asked me how much was five plus five?' Hernandez  recalled. 'I was very young, kind of shy, and I didn't say anything. She  told me to count how many fingers I had, so I answered, '12! The teacher was a little upset, but it was the truth,' he said.
Hernandez said he hopes he can be an example to children with polydactyly that there's nothing wrong with them. 'I  think it's what God commanded,' he said. 'They shouldn't feel bad about  anything, because I think it's one of the greatest blessings and  they'll be happy in life.'
 
 
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