Ida Odinga built her own political backbone through repression, loss, and activism, ending up nominated for a major UN role.
Public stature beyond marriage
Public stature beyond marriage
- Ida Odinga stayed visible long before widowhood.
- Her reputation stands separate from spousal politics.
- Public service defines her adult life.
- She was born on August 24, 1950.
- Her mother broke racial barriers in nursing.
- Schooling led her to the University of Nairobi.
- That campus introduced her to Raila Odinga.
- She married Raila Odinga on September 1, 1973.
- State pressure followed the 1982 coup attempt.
- Detention, job loss, and homelessness followed activism.
- Courts became her tool for resistance.
- She founded the League of Kenya Women Voters.
- The group pushed for participation and gender equity.
- Education and community work stayed central.
- Her profile grew outside her husband’s shadow.
- Son Fidel Castro Odinga died January 4, 2015.
- Raila Odinga died on October 15, 2025.
- Grief never sidelined her public presence.
- She was nominated as an ambassador to the United Nations Environment Programme.
- William Ruto sent her name to Parliament.
- The role extends a family service tradition.