Elderly men in the picturesque village dotted with traditional round huts bow their heads and lower their voices when they speak of the anti-apartheid hero who has "returned to his ancestors".
Here there has been no explosion of public emotion as seen in Johannesburg, no singing to celebrate Mandela's 95 years, no all-night vigils.
His home, overlooking the hills and valleys of the Eastern Cape -- where Mandela said he spent his happiest childhood days -- is sombre and eerily quiet.
Mtirara had the difficult task of breaking the news of Mandela's death to some close relatives.
"A great man is gone, we are deeply saddened, even though we knew that this day would come," he said.
"He deserved our respects while he was still alive, we are going to continue to give him that respect even in death," said Mtirara, who lives near Mandela's homestead.
The town will next week hold a public memorial service for the revered leader, affectionately known by his clan name, Madiba.
At the estate that Mandela built after his release from prison in 1990, armed soldiers and policemen stand guard.
The busy road near the house has been closed to traffic in preparation for the influx of luminaries and mourners expected to descend on this rural village.
Motorists have been diverted to dusty back roads.
Pipe-smoking old men idled along the village's many footpaths, often stopping to chat to peers about Madiba's passing.
"The old man lived a long and difficult life, but it was that difficulty that brought us freedom. Now it's time for him to rest amongst his people," he said.
"I don't think this village will ever see a person like him again. We are thankful to have called him one of our own," Njokweni said.
In the nearby town of Mthatha, where Mandela went to school and which has a museum dedicated to him, flags are flying at half mast, with posters of him hanging from lamp posts.
Despite his global icon status and years of isolation at Robben Island prison, Mandela never lost touch with his traditional roots.
Of royal lineage, he once arrived in court during his Rivonia trial decked out in full Xhosa regalia.
Mandela returned after 27 years in prison as a free man to Qunu, where his parents and children are buried in a family graveyard.
President Jacob Zuma announced a 10-day mourning period for Mandela.
That is the day his villagers say will be the hardest.
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