The Portal Archive June 2011 | Page 6

THE P RTAL June 2011 The Martyrs of Uganda Page 6 A Recusant Martyr by Joanna Bogle With Uganda once again in the news, this month we have no Recusant Martyrs, nor an Anglican Luminary. Instead we have an account of the Martyrs of Uganda. It is an inspiring story. They were black teenagers. They were the leaders of their generation. They died for a cause that today is deeply unfashionable. The Ugandan Martyrs, whose feast-day we celebrate on June 6th, died because they refused to renounce their Christian faith, and because they refused to take part in homosexual activity. for the benefits in technology, information, and knowledge that it seemed to be bringing in its wake, gave way to hostility and fear when its full message became clear. Many of the pages at his court had become Christians. They now refused to indulge his sexual tastes, and protected the younger boys from his influence. Local people unusually open Bishop Hannington Here’s what happened. In the late 19th century Christianity arrived in the kingdom of Buganda, the country we know today as Uganda. Anglican and Catholic missionaries established centres. They found that the local people were unusually open to their message. The Bagandan people had a long- cherished tradition that some day men would come who would tell them about the One True God, whom they called Katonga. Many were initially impressed by Moslem traders who came their way, and there was even greater interest when the Christian priests and teachers arrived.  A bright future There was some rivalry between the Catholic and Anglican missionaries – these were not ecumenical days – but numbers converting to both groups of missionaries were high, and the Kabacka, the king of the Bagandans, also seemed to be deeply interested. Things looked set for a bright future from the missionaries’ point of view. Refused his sexual tastes The first victim of his anger was an Anglican bishop, who had journeyed to Buganda to visit the missionary team there. Convinced that he was an advance party for some British military expedition, Mwanga had him waylaid, imprisoned and then slaughtered. As news of the tragedy filtered back to the Christian community, there was sorrow, distress, and much prayer.  Mwanga had expected anger and retaliation, but did not know how to react. He took out his fury on one of the leading Bagandan converts, Joseph Mukasa, who held a high position at his court and had always been admired and trusted by him. He had earlier reproached Mwanga for the Bishop’s death. Mwanga now ordered him to be killed.  He was beheaded and his body publicly burned – the first native son of his nation to die for Christ. Later that day another Christian – one of the young pages – was arbitrarily selected by Mwanga to die too. The boy’s ashes were mixed with those of Joseph Mukasa: Mwanga believed that, this way, he could confuse the Almighty who would not be able to hear Mukasa’s story and learn the facts about the Bishop’s death and Mwanga’s responsibility for it. But the Kabacka, Mwanga, was a spoilt young Charles Lwanga man addicted to smoking hemp, and homosexual Then came the wider slaughter. Increasingly fuelled practices.  His initial enthusiasm for Christianity, and by anger, despair, hemp and a sense that he was losing