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How the British killed Ugandan “Matyrs” and scapegoating Kabaka (King) Mwanga of Buganda By GNL Zamba

OpinionsHow the British killed Ugandan “Matyrs” and scapegoating Kabaka (King) Mwanga of Buganda By GNL Zamba

MWANGA didnt order killing the “Martyrs”, The British did it.

king-mwangaSo every June we turn our kabaka Mwanga back to the heartless villain and glorify what we read and didn’t witness. Let’s consider that the story told by the victors is not necessarily the factual account. Christians also have a tendency of ignoring truth when the facts may affect their Sanctimonious Public relations and in this case, the religion of the British that opened doors to colonialism gets a free pass and its origins not questioned. For such a monumental turning point in Uganda’s history, it’s simply too hard to Ignore the possibility of foul play that has been a cover up swept under the Lubugo “rags”. The death of the Uganda Martyrs has gone on but unexamined for so long and as an enthusiastic historian I would like us to look back at our history objectively.

The European powers used tactics of divide and conquer in almost every region, where they set their eyes on. The British were masters of this craft and employed its deceit when ever they found a community knit together. They used confusion and religion to sow seeds of mistrust and in many cases to undermine the pillars that kept African societies together. They exploited clan differences, tribal ties, nose width and class to break up loyalty to kings and Chiefs. They placed the diety of religion above all while their governments enslaved and exploited indegenous resources. I’m stating what you already know and don’t think that protectorates were an exemption. Converts of the faith would blindly become rebels to their own people, follow the teachings that turned priests to authority figures and not question or self examine their unconscious actions for fear of being perceived as lacking faith. Prisoners of piety.

Derogatory terms like “mukafiri” , “musamize” to mention are few were introduced to the local vocabulary and they transformed healers into witches and the white priests were glorified as “abatukuvu”, “abatukirivu” literally the definition of white wash before the brain wash that was to follow. In some cases junior monks “pele lugard” and “mapera” are often passed off as saints even today.

The British in the 1800s found a society of Baganda that was a centralized system of governance organized and men became Chiefs out of merit and skill. Foreigners from neighboring tribes were welcome to work on farm “ku pakasa” even children born out of marriage with women from other tribes became Baganda since buganda was a patriarchal society. During the reign of kabaka Mwanga, the Baganda prospered as fishermen with an abundant food basket, Matoke, lumonde, cassava fields, akatandalo nakayu were a must and mandatory requisite for every “mwami” household by village law and enforced by every village chief “mayumba kumi owe sazza “. Cattle kraals,Granaries for beans, maize and ground nuts made Buganda food crops prosper. They built roads that eased trade with the coastal traders and controlled trade routes to salt and iron in Bunyoro. A society of loyal prosperous of men and women which hard for the British to penetrate.

Christianity was a laughable doctrine taught in Latin with only a few converts who were servants families to explorers and missionaries. The missionaries learned that Mwanga was close to many Muslim traders who equipped him with guns and fabrics from India and Zanzibar, Unlike his predecessor Mwanga wasn’t easy to access by the Christian missionaries who he never invited to his palace or entertained in his court.

 

Mwanga’s relationship with the arab traders threatened the new seed and the Christians wrote to their homelands seeking British foot soldiers to protect the new flock(always a fanatics way in). They befriended Chiefs and the aides of the king to spy on the administration. When Mwanga converted to Islam, they knew it was a matter of time before he kicked them out of his kingdom and so they devised a plan on how to make the people turn on their king. It had to be a cruel act that would Isolate the king from people,transform a beloved king to a feared villain.
At this point it’s not far fetched to state that the missionaries burned their own and blamed it on the King. They picked out young men from influential families of the kings council to kill. It would be hard for a grieving family to side with the accused, Mwanga’s quick temper also didn’t help so it was easy to blame it on him and his right hand chief Mukajanga who was envied by many for he was “the king’s favorite”.

Burning people is not new to Christians, it’s been part of the religion since the Spanish Inquisition to the most recent kibwetere cult.

The king was innocent, he always imprisoned wrong doers and people who dis obeyed him on an island between Ggaba and kalangala. It was never part of Buganda culture to burn people, such acts had to be foreign.

Many lies are told in our history books, they make us sing the songs in missionary schools that we begin thinking it’s true. It’s time to wake up and examine these made up fabbles, the lies and accusations that only served to introduce British rule and generate bigger offertory to the Vatican and the Church of England. That’s how Baganda got divided to Catholics, Moslems and Protestants instead of “aboluganda”, The name Buganda comes out of the togetherness “okuganda” Unification brought the tribes together, the inferno tore my people apart, stop believing the lies. The Matyrs were innocent boys “pawns” sacrificed by the missionaries to black mail the king. That’s how the western powers got the Baganda in a checkmate, wise move, nobody even the king never saw it coming.
He would later recount the treachery and betrayal to his friend and cell mate kabalega king of the banyoro when he was exiled and imprisoned by British forces on Seychelles island. Never to lead his people again.

 

GNL Zamba, born Ernest Nsimbi, is a popular and influential hip hop artist in Uganda, credited[2] with bringing rap and Lugaflow style of music to mainstream radio and other media in Uganda.

His stage name, GNL, is short for “Greatness No Limits”. He is the founder and CEO of the independent hip hop record label Baboon Forest Entertainment,[3] which nurtures new talent in Kampala, Uganda.[4] He is also an actor, filmmaker, and ambassador for Ugandan brands and social initiatives.[5]

He began his professional music career in 2007, after completing a bachelor’s degree in environmental science atMakerere University in Uganda.[6] He was originally signed to Platinum Entertainment, and formed his own company Baboon Forest Entertainment in 2008.[1][7]

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