UAH is secular, intellectual and non-aligned politically, culturally or religiously email discussion group.


[UAH] Museveni@Martyrs' memorial and early converts' No date, with a stamp from the Church Missionary Society in London.

Dear Ugandans, I greet you all.

We salute the Uganda Matyrs. They died for freedom of conscience and against traditional tyranny.

Christianity and Islam played a role in the modernisation of Uganda.

Unfortunately, on account of misguided beliefs, some people misused the new religions to bring about sectarianism based on religion.

This is why NRM has been decampaigning sectarianism whether of religion or tribe and fought against discrimination of women and children.

In the Bible we are told that Jesus Christ preached the gospel but also worked as a carpenter with his foster father Joseph. He must have worked to contribute to household income.

Therefore, I urge you all to emulate him and religious leaders to guide Ugandans how to earn better incomes for their homes alongside preaching.
I wish you a blessed day.

Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda

June 3rd, 2013

On Mon, Jun 3, 2013 at 4:52 PM, Rehema Uganda <rehemass@googlemail.com> wrote:




On Tue, Feb 12, 2013 at 9:02 AM, Rehema Uganda <rehemass@googlemail.com> wrote:
'Martyrs' memorial and early converts' No date, with a stamp from the Church Missionary Society in London.



READ MORE AT

Namugongo 'martyrs' were not really martyrs

25 Nov 2008 16 Comments

by semuwemba in Politics, Religion Tags:

Ssekabaka Mwanga II (1884 1897) -photo on Buganda Kingdom website

I have been thinking about the Uganda Christian  'martyrs' prosecuted on June 3,1886 at Namugongo and its significance to Uganda as a country after one of the Ugandans raised it on the Ugandan At Heart(UAH) forum. So I asked myself questions like: "were the Uganda martyrs really deserve to be called 'martyrs' or not?", " Could Catholics killed for faith be called "martyrs"?", " Why did kabaka Mwanga took this decision at the time?".

Now it is my understanding that within the Buganda culture the execution of the Christian martyrs was both political and religious. It is the Buganda kingdom that invited the first missionaries who arrived in 1877 and the kingdom benefited tremendously from them particularly in developmental projects like schools. So we thank the insight Kabaka Mutesa 1 had at the time to invite these people.

Namugongo Martyrs shrine

Nevertheless, I'm still puzzled that we continue to call these people 'martyrs' due to the fact that they challenged the power structures of the Bugandan culture at the time because of their faith. If we are to go by the Muslims who keep challenging the power and social structure of the western countries because of their faith, then the word 'martyr' is not truly applicable to these people.

Muslims or Christians who attempt to do today what these 'martyrs' did during Kabaka Mwanga's reign will feel the wrath of the law and some are even branded terrorists. However, we should not forget that those who die in this way in places like the Middle East are still branded as 'martyrs' by some Islamic factions. In Bugandan culture, which the kabaka (leader of Buganda) represents, the kabaka ruled with great authority, and to refuse anything he asked was not only to offend the kabaka but to dishonour the entire Bugandan kingdom. Mwanga perceived that Christians were a challenge to his political power, since Christian pages were not honouring and were taught not to honour their obligation to obey him. If we are to  continue to call these Christians killed at Namugongo martyrs, then we have got a lot of martyrs now in Uganda.

Second, it is important at the outset to realize that the persecution of Christians in Uganda was not the norm. There were relatively few Christians actually killed for religious reasons compared to the large number of Christian Baganda. So I don't think Kabaka Mwanga set out to kill Christians as in Christians or Protestants as in Protestants.

Third, all of the martyrs were Bugandan natives converted through the missionary efforts of British Anglicans and French Catholics. Thus, their lives and deaths were embedded from start to finish in a culture they were familiar with and understood; they were not killed due to a lack of cultural knowledge or a "foreigner's mistake." A man like Joseph Mukasa was the personal servant of the kabaka who oversaw all of the kabaka's pages. He knew what he was getting himself into by confronting kabaka Mwanga over murder of Anglican Bishop Hannington. Mukasa told Mwanga "bluntly" that his ordering of the death of Hannington was wrong; this angered Mwanga, and Mwanga took Mukasa's outbursts as a form of treason. Mukasa knew the drill about Buganda cultures at the time very well. To disagree with the Kabaka was not uncommon in Buganda but Mukasa's assertive confronting of Mwanga was unique. The Kabakas used to allow passive forms of resistance and there were effective.

In addition, Mwanga chose Namugongo as a spot to execute these people because to die at Namugongo made one an enemy of the Buganda state. Namugongo was an equivalent of the England's "Tower Hill."

What is again more disturbing is how these Baganda natives who converted to Christianity ended up dying on the same fire for the cause of Christ in the midst of the Christian factions of Buganda. The church was divided at the time and it needed these people more alive than dead at the time. Before these 'martyrs' were killed, some people working under Kabaka Mwanga offered them a chance to run away but these guys decided not to -basically because they wanted to die for Christ.

Furthermore, a total of 32 baganda including the leader of the Christian 'rebels' called Charles Lwanga were killed- 13 of those were Catholics, 9 were protestants and 10 were unbelievers (who had been awaiting execution for non-religious crimes) but even the non-believers killed the day are counted as martyrs.

If we really still want to remember these political rebels as 'martyrs', let us do what Robert Royal did by publishing a remarkable new book in 2000 which he called "The Catholic Martyrs of the Twentieth Century: A Comprehensive World History", instead of people flocking to Namugongo every year. Much of Royal's research is new. The project began with a sentence in one of Pope John Paul II's encyclicals. He said that the martyrs of our century "should not be forgotten." A group of parishioners at Saint Aloysius Parish in New Canaan, Conn, took the words seriously, and began to accumulate materials. The word spread and materials started coming in from around the world. What began as a simple list became an amazing archive. With the help of his brother who is a priest, Royal began the work of putting the results in book form.

With due respect to my non-Muslim friends, I don't think we should continue to call the 1886 Namugongo religious people 'martys' in the sense of the word in relation to the present events happening in the world. However, I'm happy to say that Buganda kingdom has changed greatly since that time. There is a lot of religious freedom. Catholics, Protestants, Christians and Muslims can all interact within the kingship of Buganda without any problem. It is more reason for Ugandans to support this kingdom that is not afraid of changes that make it stronger. What Kabaka Mwanga did at that time is inexcusable but at least we all learnt from it but most importantly we understand why he did it.

Abbey Kibirige Semuwemba
United Kingdom

http://semuwemba.com/2008/11/25/namugongo-martyrs-were-not-really-martyrs/


--
Rehema
Patriot in Kampala,East Africa
:UMBS is a registered organization devoted to matters of interest to Muslims in Uganda.Muslims from other countries are welcome to join us too. Follow us on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/#!/UMBSFORUM. To donate to UMBS activities, click on: http://um-bs.com/donate/ or just deposit money on UMBS Bank A/C at Bank of Africa:07074320002 .



--
Rehema
Patriot in Kampala,East Africa
:UMBS is a registered organization devoted to matters of interest to Muslims in Uganda.Muslims from other countries are welcome to join us too. Follow us on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/#!/UMBSFORUM. To donate to UMBS activities, click on: http://um-bs.com/donate/ or just deposit money on UMBS Bank A/C at Bank of Africa:07074320002 .



--
H.OGWAPITI
-----------------------------------------------------
"To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that  we are to stand by the president right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic  and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public."
---Theodore Roosevelt

Sharing is Caring:


WE LOVE COMMENTS


0 comments:

Post a Comment

Popular Posts

Blog Archive

Followers