The Uganda Martyrs Trail City Tour
A
young king. Intrigue. Conspiracy and harrowing brutality
sums up the tale of 26 brave Ugandan martyrs who
were burnt alive because of their faith. The story
of the Uganda martyrs is a story of faith, courage
and cruelty. It is from its ashes that Uganda’s
and probably East Africa’s most important
place of Christian pilgrimage was built. Their fate
was climax of a two year wave of religious persecution
of Christians, eight years after the first Christian
missionaries set foot in the country with high hopes
of spreading the gospel.
Missionaries were invited to Uganda by King Muteesa1
in 1875. Protestant and Catholic missionaries arrived
and set up schools, churches and hospitals in the
kingdom. Unfortunately the king died in 1884 and
was succeeded by his 18 year old son Mwanga. The
king misled by tradionalits and Arabs in his court,
was threatened by coming of Europeans to Buganda
and he realized that the first converts put loyalty
to Christ above the traditional loyalty to the king.
He then ordered that all Christian converts be burnt
alive after giving them a chance to denounce their
faith. The Namugongo martyrdoms produced a result
entirely opposite to Mwanga’s intentions.
The example of these martyrs, who walked to their
deaths praying for their enemies and executioners,
so inspired many of the bystanders that they began
to seek instruction from the remaining Christians.
Exactly
how many Baganda Christians were speared, beheaded,
cremated, castrated and clubbed to death is an open
question. 45 deaths are recorded by name but the
actual tally was probably several hundred. The persecution
culminated at Namugongo on June 3 1886, when at
least26 catholic and Anglican converts having rejected
the opportunity to renounce their new faith was
roasted alive.
Within a few years, the original handful of converts
had multiplied many times and spread far beyond
the court. The martyrs had left the indelible impression
that Christianity was truly African, not simply
a white man’s religion. Most of the missionary
work was carried out by Africans rather than the
white missionaries and Christianity spread easily.
Uganda now has the largest percentage of professed
Christians than any nation in Africa. The 22 catholic
martyrs were finally canonized by Pope Paul VI on
October 18 1964
during
the Vatican II conference. In July 1969, Pope Paul
IV visited Uganda, the first reigning Pope to set
foot in sub-Saharan Africa to make a pilgrimage
to Namugongo, where he instructed that a shrine
and church be built on the spot where Lwanga, the
young leader had been killed. The site of the massacre
was visited by Archbishop Robert Runcie of Canterbury
in 1984 and Pope John Paul II in 1993.
The tour will take you through the awe-inspiring
story of these young men. It begins at the Kasubi
tombs where the King first welcomed the first Europeans
to his kingdom and where the four great kings are
buried. It will then lead through the oldest Catholic
and Protestant churches and then through the various
sites some of the martyrs were killed on their long
walk to the final execution grounds where they were
finally burnt alive at Namugongo.