April 7, 2026

5 thoughts on “Will Kenyans Pay Last Respects to Late Kimondo?

  1. Death does not promise and it comes like a thief with no notice of the day.Some times we can not blame any one on a such move, it depend on how one communicate with his friends, and how he or she contacts with Kenyans family or the circumstances which made him to reside in Sweden Stockholm no one knows except himself and wife.People who stays abroard have so many reasons.Let it be as it is.

  2. While it is true that the open-house concept is somewhat of a tradition in Stockholm, the implication of this article is that since one hasn’t been called for there is need for concern. Despite the article’s author stating further on in the article that the family has the discretion in taking whatever course of action they determine, the seed of doubt and suspicion in the minds of those reading the article has effectively been planted. This is a time to show solidarity with the family and we should not politicize the issue of his passing. Traditions vary depending on whom and where, moreover intruding on sacred and sensitive family matters or scoring socio-political points in the guise of keeping Kenyans informed should be the furthest thing from one’s mind at this time. With this in mind analyzing what the family is, should or would do is definitely not in keeping with the concepts of civility and only reinforces the notion of underlying malice being afoot.
    According to the article Kimondo was a “kikuyu elder” hence the supposition that he must be accorded the respect this position demands. Age alone does not determine an elder, in the accepted use of the term and furthermore one cannot be slapped with the title just because it suits the moment especially posthumously. To my knowledge Stockholm doesn’t have an accepted corps of elders amongst the Kikuyu community and therefore claiming that Kimondo was one is tantamount to fiction and is frankly speaking, all in the authors mind. If the kikuyu elder corps does indeed exit one wonders how the group has remained so elusive for so long and not revealed themselves when leadership has been wanting. Perhaps the author could post an article informing Kenyans of intricacies of elder selection, for the Kenyan communities represented in Stockholm. This would be most informative and who knows, they may be even potential elders amongst those uninformed of these events as myself. This is perhaps a better path to take in achieving the cohesiveness we lack as a society. But as the cause of everything that plagues Kenyans everywhere, I would bet an arm and a leg that the concept of Stockholm elders is just another smoke-screen for the age-old politics of opportunism. Let us stop deluding ourselves and climb out of the parasitic quagmire of stomach politics.
    As usual there is a campaign that is been waged on behalf of the group dubbed Kenyan Stockholmers, and it is both distasteful and dishonorable. What is shocking is that in this day and age the majority of Kenyans, even in Stockholm, still remain silent while their opinions are been voiced by proxy. And yet they clamor for change behind closed doors. The change Kenyans want begins by saying no, a resounding NO to being used. Stand and be counted, I have chosen to do so.

    KSB: Kanda, your thesis is that to be an “elder” within the Kenyan context, you have to be organized in a group. At his age of 66, Kimondo was an elder with or without having been part of an organized group. To allude that without a group of “organized elders” there are no elders is to suggest that without a Nation there are no people. This is disjointed logic. Whether you like it or not, there are Kenyans here referred to as “Wazee wa Kazi” and there are “Vijana” aka the youth. Even Swedes do organize memorial services for their loved ones before retreating to a private burial. The thrust of the article is that if Kimondo is sent to his final resting place without his friends being accorded an opportunity to pay their last respects, it will not be in order because he was well known and liked by many people. Other assumptions you make to build a bogus case of “politicization” of the matter do not deserve a response because they are pedestrian.

  3. The issue of people calling KSB to ask questions and make demands on the family is of course open to interpretation. Some may see it as an act of compassion arising out of concern while others may view it as an act of interference geared to creating confusion. One may even call it gossip. Your article is therefore based purely on supposition, speculative and fictitious. It is pure fantasy and belongs in the realms of novel writing not matter how strenuous your defense. Let us not encroach on the privacy of others and always engage ourselves in matters that are above reproach.
    Since, as you put it, being an elder doesn’t necessarily mean being organized, it nullifies your point of kikuyu elders being expected to contact the family. If not this would be most contradictory. One does however expect individuals, that are elders per KSB definition, to voice their personal opinions but this does not reflect the opinion of the community in question as a whole because they do not have the mandate to do so. They would have to ascribe to belonging to an organized group of elders known to the members of that particular community. That being the case, my disjointed logic leads me to believe that some Kenyans in Stockholm have the morbid need to create conspiracies to attract attention, inflate their egos and perspectives of self-importance.

    KSB:
    >The issue of people calling KSB to ask questions and make demands on the family is of course open to interpretation.
    #No one has called KSB to make any demands on the FAMILY. KSB broke the story and consequently, Kimondo’s friends have been calling to try and ESTABLISH whether there is any info about a Memorial where they could pay their last respects. You are reading more than what is there then using these additions to present your argument. This is your Achilles’ heel.

    >Since, as you put it, being an elder doesn’t necessarily mean being organized, it nullifies your point of kikuyu elders being expected to contact the family…
    #Majority of Kimondo’s closest friends (names on file) are elderly Kenyans, just like him. These are the elders the article is referring to, not some Kikuyu Elder’s Association in Stockholm or GEMA in Scandinavia as you tend to think. Twisted logic is when you want readers to believe that since these friends are not organized, they are not elders. In your bemused reasoning, “elders” must be an “organized group of people” and your failure to grasp this simple point is what is leading your key argument astray.

    >…to voice their personal opinions but this does not reflect the opinion of the community in question as a whole because they do not have the mandate to do so.
    #The article does not say that these elders speak on behalf of the Kikuyu “community in question as a whole”. This is your sole addition. If you can bother to re-read the article, it says that these elders were expected to intervene (in the face of silence) because of their known and close proximity to Kimondo during his life time.

    >That being the case, my disjointed logic leads me to believe that some Kenyans in Stockholm have the morbid need to create conspiracies to attract attention, inflate their egos and perspectives of self-importance.
    #Be that as it may, some malicious commentators at KSB have an insatiable appetite of shamelessly twisting facts to fit into their parochial agenda of creating drama where there is none, fostering undue antagonism and employing crude sophistry to sound erudite when they are actually wallowing in mediocrity.

  4. Michael Kanda, wewe ndio uache siasa za drama. You don’t have to read politics hata kwa msiba kama hii.

  5. ngware kisia, maisha ni drama na drama ni maisha. Pilipili gani unakuasha? Lazima mtu atoe maoni yake ama pia hio ni makosa? Maoni yangu ni watu waishi kama ndugu na utache siasa za kumalizana kama hizi.

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