Sign Up to Our Newsletter
Subscribe
Primary Menu Search
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrity News
  • Fashion and Beauty
    • Hair
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
    • Weddings
  • Lifestyle
    • Love & Relationships
    • Parenting
    • Motoring
    • Food
    • Travel
      • Travel News
      • Property
  • Health & Wellness
    • Diet
    • Fitness
    • Health
  • Work & Money
    • Finance
    • Career
  • Sports
    • Soccer Mag
    • Sa Rugby Mag
    • Sa Cricket Mag
    • Compleat Golfer
    • American Sports
    • Multi Sport
  • Competitions
  • Deals
    • One Day Deals
    • Nationwide Deals
      • Deals in Cape Town
      • Deals in Johannesburg
      • Deals in Durban
      • Deals in Pretoria
      • Deals in Port Elizabeth
    • Accommodation Deals
    • Romantic Getaways
    • Food and Drink Deals
    • Experiences
    • Health and Wellness Deals
  • Pork Recipes

Phuti Khomo’s Funeral Outfit Sparks Mixed Reactions Online

by Chiraag
Phuti Khomo at funeral, couture outfit, public mourning debate, South African celebrity, Actress in hat at church, mourning attire controversy, funeral fashion South Africa, public response, Bona Magazine

There’s a saying: when a celebrity steps into a church, half the country leans in. That’s what happened over the weekend when actress Phuti Khomo turned heads with her attire at her father’s funeral in Mamelodi. What emerged was more than a fashion moment; it opened up a conversation about grief, expression, and what we expect from women publicly mourning.

When Elegance Meets Mourning

On Saturday, 4 October 2025, the actress and model attended the burial of her father, Jabu Senior Khomo, in Mamelodi. Word is she wore couture by Sherif Tailor, an outfit some called dramatic for the solemn occasion. A carefully styled hat and impeccably tailored pieces turned her image into a talking point nearly as fast as the funeral itself.

Some guests reportedly remarked that she looked like a chief mourner, while others felt the outfit overshadowed the event. One spectator even said the service felt part fashion show, part memorial.

Mzansi Wades Into the Debate

As images circulated on Instagram, Twitter (X), and TikTok, South Africans weighed in. Comments ran the gamut:

  • “Let people grieve how they want”

  • “High-budget funeral—no harm in elegance”

  • “When you lose someone, you dress the way that helps you feel right”

  • “This feels performative; mourning shouldn’t require couture”

Critics questioned whether grief had become a performance in the age of social media. Supporters defended Khomo’s choice, emphasising self-expression and the need to honour a loved one in a way that feels true to the bereaved.

Fashion, Grief, and Our Cultural Lens

In South Africa, funerals are rarely just quiet affairs. They are stages for legacy, identity, and respect. Dressing for a funeral has long held symbolism, showing respect, signifying status, or signalling how much the departed meant to you.

For public figures, especially, attire becomes annotation. People expect a certain decorum. Yet in a multimedia world, even mourning is under the spotlight.

But consider this: Khomo’s styling wasn’t about vanity. It might have been her way to hold on to dignity. To mourn loudly. To state, “I honour him boldly, even as the cameras watch.”

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Maphepha Ndaba (@maphepha_ndaba)

A Fresh Angle: Mourning in the Social Age

What we’re witnessing is a shift. Grief, once private, now unfolds in public. There’s pressure to perform authenticity, to look the part. We’ve blurred the line between tribute and spectacle.

In this moment, Phuti Khomo isn’t just an actress in a striking outfit. She’s also a woman navigating how to mourn faithfully in view of a watching world. Critics, fans, and armchair analysts all have opinions, but none can fully step into her shoes.

Let Her Mourn, Let Her Choose

Funerals are sacred. But they are also deeply personal. There is no playbook for loss. If her couture seems unconventional to some, perhaps that is the point: grief doesn’t come in standard fits.

In the end, maybe the debate tells us more about our own discomfort with public grief than it does about her outfit. Let us give space to posture, to style, to tears, and to those who mourn in their own unique way.

Source: Briefly News

Featured Image: Instagram/@phutikhomo

More from Entertainment

Black Coffee to redefine African identity with ‘Africa Is Not A Jungle’ benefit concert

Travis Scott Takes Over FNB Stadium: Road Closures, Travel Tips and What Fans Need to Know

Finally coming home! Nosekeni Mandela celebrates husband’s release

Sol Phenduka microphone conversation, Palesa Mphaki silhouette, reality TV advice, South African relationships, Bona Magazine

When Reality TV Becomes Real Life: Sol Phenduka Opens Up on Advice for Palesa Mphaki

    Primary Menu

    • Entertainment
      • Celebrity News
    • Fashion and Beauty
      • Hair
      • Beauty
      • Fashion
      • Weddings
    • Lifestyle
      • Love & Relationships
      • Parenting
      • Motoring
      • Food
      • Travel
        • Travel News
        • Property
    • Health & Wellness
      • Diet
      • Fitness
      • Health
    • Work & Money
      • Finance
      • Career
    • Sports
      • Soccer Mag
      • Sa Rugby Mag
      • Sa Cricket Mag
      • Compleat Golfer
      • American Sports
      • Multi Sport
    • Competitions
    • Deals
      • One Day Deals
      • Nationwide Deals
        • Deals in Cape Town
        • Deals in Johannesburg
        • Deals in Durban
        • Deals in Pretoria
        • Deals in Port Elizabeth
      • Accommodation Deals
      • Romantic Getaways
      • Food and Drink Deals
      • Experiences
      • Health and Wellness Deals
    • Pork Recipes

    • Contact Us
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookies Policy
    CAPE TOWN OFFICE: 36 Old Mill Road, Ndabeni, Maitland, 7405, Western Cape > Telephone: (021) 530 3300 > Fax: (021) 530 3333
    © Copyright 2025 Bona Magazine
    ×

    SEARCH

    ×
    We only use cookies on this Site for particular features to work, the cookies do not collect and/or store any personal information about you.Ok