Senior Reporter
jensen.lavende@guardian.co.tt
In coffins which stood side by side, father and son Aqiyl and Akini Kafi were laid to rest at the Crown Street, Public Cemetery yesterday after a funeral service at the Corpus Christi RC Church, Eastern Main Road, Laventille.
Catholic Priest Father Clifford Mainooh, during his homily, called on relatives and friends of the murdered father and son to unite for the betterment of the country.
Akini, who would have celebrated his third birthday on Thursday, was killed when the vehicle his family was travelling in was riddled with bullets in Belmont on May 7.
Akini was declared dead on arrival at the Port-of-Spain General Hospital, after he was taken there with his mother, Antonia Cain-Kafi, who was also shot in the vehicle they were travelling in along Upper St Francois Valley Road.
Cain-Kafi was on her way to drop her child off at daycare when the attack occurred. Her husband, Aqiyl Kafi and his friend, Anthony Wilson, were also killed in the shooting.
Wilson, who police believe was the target, was laid to rest on Wednesday.
Mainooh said unity is the only way anyone can achieve greatness. He stressed that unification must include the Holy Spirit as the Catholic Church celebrated the Day of Pentecost yesterday. Mainooh, who was not present at the candlelight vigil held for Akini on Thursday, which would have been his second birthday, reiterated the call made then for a closer connection to God in response to children being murdered.
“If we take nothing from this service, let Aqiyl and his son, Akini, speak to you to call on the Holy Spirit, so that the bacchanal we see and all the mistakes anybody else does will be conquered, and you will be able to see goodness in them. It doesn’t mean you become blind to wrongdoing,” Mainooh said.
He added that while prayers are important, unity with the help of the Holy Spirit is paramount for behavioural changes and for people to “see beyond our barriers.” He added that this would allow those who do accept a spiritual unification to be able to love and be able to live in unity.
Also speaking at the funeral was Akini’s teacher, Dianna, who remembered her last day speaking with him on May 1. The day the child was murdered would have been his first day at school that week, she said.
“Despite the pain we all feel today, I am happy that I had 365 days to love Akini and to cherish him. His love I will keep in my heart forever. Akini, I will always love you and you will always be Blooming Minds’ perfect black man.”
Despite Homicide detectives requesting the public’s assistance in the triple killing, those responsible remain on the run.
