You don't believe in ushirikina, why have feelings about them? (You said you hate).
Are you suggesting that to have feelings about ushirikina, you must first/also believe in it?
Kuto-believe kwenye ushirikina may be rational or irrational to some but is my value system.
My feelings about ushirikina is how I feel in my physical body. For example, the experience of an Albino kukatwa sehemu za mwili wake kwa sababu za kishirikina. This ushirikika is something that I feel in and around my heart and stomach.
Perhaps, if they stop killing them, my feelings about ushirikina will go but my value system of not believing in ushirikina will remain intact. This is because, unlike belief, feelings often don't last forever.
You also seem to differentiate between good feelings and bad feelings.
That hating ushirikina has to do with having bad feelings about it.
However, all feelings are good as they reflect back to how a particular experience is affecting someone.
The fact that I don't believe in ushirikina does not necessarily mean that I should not reflect on (feel), for example, how
painful or hurtful it is to see Albinos being killed kwa sababu tuu za kishirikina.
Unless you elaborate on what you mean by "God" or "believe in God", then the default answer is no.