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Uganda’s Culture

Map of Uganda showing administrative districts.

CULTURE

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The culture of Uganda is made up of a diverse range of ethnic groups. Lake Kyoga forms the northern boundary for the Bantu-speaking people, who dominate much of East, Central, and Southern Africa. In Uganda, they include the Baganda and several other tribes

The Baganda are the largest single ethnic group in Uganda. They occupy the central part of Uganda which was formerly the Buganda Province. They are found in the present districts of Kampala, Mpigi, Mukono, Masaka, Kalangala, Kiboga, Rakai, Mubende, Luwero, Wakiso, Ssembabule, and Buikwe. They are a Bantu-speaking people and their language is called Luganda.

In the north, the Lango and the Acholi peoples predominate, who speak Nilotic languages. To the east are the Iteso and Karamojong, who speak a Nilotic language, whereas the Gishu are part of the Bantu and live mainly on the slopes of Mt. Elgon. They speak Lumasaba, which is closely related to the Luhya of Kenya. A few Pygmies live isolated in the rainforests of western Uganda.

Religion

Christians make up 85.2 percent of Uganda’s population. There were sizeable numbers of Sikhs and Hindus in the country until Asians were expelled in 1972 by Idi Amin, following an alleged dream, although many are now returning following an invitation from President Yoweri Museveni. Muslims make up 12 percent of Uganda’s population.

Sport

Football is the national sport in Uganda. The Uganda national football team, nicknamed “The Cranes” is controlled by the Federation of Uganda Football Associations. They have never qualified for the FIFA World Cup finals. Their best finish in the African Cup of Nations was second in 1978.

In cricket, Uganda was part of the East Africa team that qualified for the Cricket World Cup in 1975.

There is also a national basketball league played by some professional players as well as college students and a few high school students. [citation needed] Uganda hosted a regional tournament in 2006, [citation needed] which its national team, nicknamed The Silverbacks, won.

Rugby union is also a growing sport in Uganda, and the Uganda national rugby union team has been growing stronger as evidenced by more frequent victories and close games against African powerhouses like Namibia and Morocco. At multi-sport events, Uganda has enjoyed most of its success in athletics and boxing. Uganda has won seven medals at the Olympics and 39 at the Commonwealth Games, all in these two sports. Some of Uganda’s most notable athletes include John Akii-Bua, who won Uganda’s first Olympic gold in the 400 metres hurdles at the 1972 Munich Olympics, and Davis Kamoga, a bronze medalist in the 400 metres and the first Ugandan to win a medal at the IAAF World Championships in Athletics (winning a silver at the 1997 World Championships in Athens). Moses Ndiema Kipsiro was the bronze medalist in the 5,000 metres at the 2007 World Championships in Osaka, and Stephen Kiprotich was the winner of the marathon at the 2012 London Olympics and the 2013 World Championships. Notable among female athletes include Dorcus Inzikuru, who was the first Ugandan to win a gold at the World Athletics Championships when she won the 3,000 metres steeplechase at the 2005 World Championships in Helsinki, before adding a gold at the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne.

Ayub Kalule was one of Uganda’s most successful boxers, winning golds in the light welterweight category at the 1974 World Amateur Boxing Championships and the lightweight division at the 1974 Commonwealth Games before turning professional and becoming World Boxing Association lightmiddleweight world champion in 1979.

As of April 2021, Uganda has been one of four African members of the rapidly growing international federation for lacrosse. For the first time, Uganda will feature a national team at the 2022 Under-19 World Lacrosse Championships.

Clothing

In Uganda, the kanzu is the national dress of men in the country. Women from central and eastern Uganda wear a dress with a sash tied around the waist and large exaggerated shoulders called a gomesi. Women from the west and northwest drape a long cloth around their waists and shoulders called suuka. Women from the south-west wear a long baggy skirt and tie a short matching cloth across their shoulders c known as omushanana. Women also wear a floor-length dress called a busuti, which was introduced by the 19th-century missionaries.

Language

Uganda is ethnologically diverse, with at least 40 languages in usage. Luganda is the most common language. English and Swahili are the official languages of Uganda, even though English is more popular. Swahili, the East African lingua franca, is not widespread as a language though it was made an official national language in September 2005. Luganda, a language widespread in central Uganda, has been the official local language but education is conducted in English.

Agriculture

The agriculture sector of the Ugandan economy, which composes roughly 40% of the country’s GDP, is largely fulfilled by women laborers, especially in managing products, marketing, and the crop sub-sector. 76% of women work in the agriculture sector and roughly 66% of men do, and women provide for 80% of food crops and 60% of traditional exports such as coffee or tea.

Agricultural products supply a significant portion of Uganda’s foreign exchange earnings, with coffee alone, of which Uganda is Africa’s second largest producer after Ethiopia, accounting for about 17% of the country’s exports in 2017 and earning the country US$545 million. Exports of apparel, hides, skins, vanilla, vegetables, fruits, cut flowers, and fish are growing, while cotton, tea, and tobacco continue to be mainstays.

Uganda in HISTORY

Uganda. Band of King’s College, Budo, 1933

A traffic officer at Wandegeya- 1986 4th (Uganda) Battalion, The King’s African Rifles, July 1939

King’s African Rifles (KAR) in Uganda. (1940s)

Imperial hotel Kampala in 1937

1972, president Idi Amin Dada ordered more than 80,000 Asians to leave Uganda saying they were milking the Ugandan economy. Namirembe Cathedral in 1930’s

King’s African Rifles (KAR) in Uganda. (1940s)

Uganda in HISTORY

Bombo road in 1970’s

John Akibua representing Uganda in the Olympics in 1972. He won the final there, setting a world record time of 47.82 seconds despite running on the inside lane. Lumumba Hall officially opened in 1970’s

Celebrations on the streets after Yusuf Lule was sworn into office on April 13th 1979. This formally ended eight years of Amin’s rule.

A 5-shilling bank note in 1980’s

Tuesday October 9, 1962 | The Day Uganda Gained Independence from British Rule!

Kabaka Ronald Muwenda Mutebi II of Buganda playing football with fellow students Andrew Littler and Adrian Wallwork, 5th December 1969 in Britain. The Uganda Cranes football team in the 1970s

Colonial administrators and their families awaiting the arrival of the Queen mother, at Entebbe airport, 1959, just 3 years before the end of British rule!

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