Anger is awakened as a video of women playing on the grave flying on the Internet

  • A video showing a group of women dancing and singing on the grave has created different emotions on social networks
  • The video involves six women playing and entertaining, while others drink while few spectators look closely
  • Kenyans online shared different views discussing cultures and religions, with many condemning the act

A video spreading on social networks shows a group of women dancing and singing on the grave, which created different emotions from Internet users.

A video of Kenyan women dancing at the grave stimulates emotion (pictures for example). Photo: FG Trade.
Source: Getty Images

In the video, six women are trapped showing different dances while enjoying world -famous music.

Kenyans talk about video women playing on the grave

The video has attracted Kenyan emotions online. Many disagree with the actions of the actors, referring to the contempt.

Lisa Mine:

“Until they are spiritually attacked to the individual level, they will not understand.”

Lazarus Gatimu:

“It's not a lost generation, it's a generation that lives an unlimited life. That's what everyone should crave.”

WAMUMUS MUSYOKI:

“These are the lowest genus; look at their clothes and shoes. Who is playing in the grave?”

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Ephantus Kariuki:

“It is a generation that has refused to be placed in a box. They have refused to be mentally abducted, they will oppose their authority and beliefs.

MUCHIRI MUSGI:

“I am dealing with a large number of them, and I can tell you, they are far from the world we live.”

Beatrice Githinji:

“Do not know that these are in Z. I am in Z, and I cannot do such a thing, and my friends cannot.”

Anger is awakened as a video of women playing on the grave spreading
Kenyan women playing at the grave creates emotion. Photo: Neymar Kybe.
Source: Facebook

Maasai Muriu:

“Who told you these are Gen Z? They are all women trampling on their peers for their own reasons.”

Ochieng 'Evans Awimbo:

“Christianity is in chaos, as foretold in holy books. Prepare for the last times; it's not about Sunday school again.”

Fazul Omar Headmaster:

“It was not about Sunday's school, but our African culture.

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SHEILA GOES:

“Sunday? No! We want Africans especially this new generation to be free with all those religious bonds. Bongo Again, let's be free, to bring back the whites to their Bible, we want us to be free and not to comment without doing the right research, I have no lawyer. “

Gladys Nderitu:

“To be honest, I would like my funeral this way. Why are the noise of crying and other things when even some people didn't know you, and others didn't appreciate it when you were alive?”

Amos Mungai:

“This generation has no ethnicity, which is why they speak Swahili. They have no culture, which is why they do not respect it.

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