The Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) on Friday, November 21, 2025, stood shoulder to shoulder with global military representatives as they joined Commonwealth nations in a deeply moving Remembrance Service honouring African soldiers who fought in World War I. The commemorations took place across three historic sites in Taita-Taveta County — the Voi Commonwealth War Cemetery, the Joint India-Africa Commemorative Pillar, and the Taita War Cemetery.
The event marked the 8th Remembrance Service, bringing renewed spotlight to the often-forgotten East African heroes who shed blood on home soil in what would become the longest continuous campaign of World War I.
The solemn ceremony was graced by Australian High Commissioner Jenny Da Rin and India’s High Commissioner Dr. Adarsh Swaika, who led the tributes to fallen African, Indian, and Commonwealth troops who fought in the brutal East African Campaign.
The campaign, waged across British East Africa (modern-day Kenya) and German East Africa (modern-day Tanzania), continued for two weeks after the Armistice in Europe, highlighting its intensity and historical peculiarity.
Speaking during the event, Ms. Da Rin expressed heartfelt gratitude to all who gathered to honour the dead, noting that “their courage and sacrifice continue to inspire generations and must never be forgotten.”
Personnel from the Kenya Navy Headquarters and Mariakani Garrison led Kenya’s uniformed presence, marching in precision as they joined foreign dignitaries and veterans in honouring the fallen. Senior KDF officers, retired service members, World War veterans, and representatives from the Taita Taveta community were all in attendance.
The ceremony’s emotional peak came during a two-minute silence, observed in complete stillness as nations collectively remembered soldiers who laid down their lives more than a century ago.
Wreaths were laid by representatives from Commonwealth countries, military attachés from the US, UK, Australia, India, and Canada, and senior Kenyan officers. The site — where many African soldiers rest — became a vivid intersection of history, gratitude, and global solidarity.
For many attendees, the service was more than tradition — it was a reclamation of African wartime history that has for decades remained overshadowed by European narratives.
The Taita-Taveta region was a major battleground during WW1, yet the heroism of African scouts, porters, and soldiers has rarely received the global recognition it deserves. Friday’s multinational ceremony signalled a growing effort to rewrite that imbalance and honour African troops who fought in extreme conditions with limited resources.
As wreaths lay quietly in the tropical heat, one message prevailed:
Kenya remembers. Africa remembers. The world remembers.
The fallen may be gone — but ceremonies like these ensure their sacrifices echo through generations.







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