uganda martyrs university Migori County Uganda Martyrs University: 06/06/18
06/06/18
06/06/18

Uganda Martyrs University (UMU) Direction


Uganda  Martyrs  University  (UMU) Direction  is  loca ted  at  Nkozi,  82  km  west  of  Kampala,  the   capital city of Ugan da. Established in October 1993 with  84 students and two academic  departments, UMU currently has 7 Faculties,  1 Institute and 3 Schools; and about 5,000  students, of whom about 1,500 are full-time re sidents on campus. Others participate in  distance-learning  and  part-tim e  programmes  at  the  Universi ty  campuses  in  Kampala,   Mbale  and  Masaka.  The  University  has  esta blished  an  international  reputation  and   students  come  from  several  countries  in  Af rica,  Europe  and  the   US  for  full-time  and   part-time programmes; and others  for field work and research. 

Uganda Martyrs University 7 CONCTACT INFORMATION


Uganda  Martyrs  University 7 CONCTACT INFORMATION  Faculty            of            Science General            University            Contact            Information             Uganda Martyrs University  Uganda Martyrs University  P.O. Box 5498, Kampala        P.O. Box 5498, Kampala  Tel: + 256 (0)382 278 606  Tel: + 256 (0)382 410611  Fax: + 256 (0)382 410100  E-mail:  umu@umu.ac.ug Fax: + 256 (0)382 410100  E-Mail:  deanscience@umu.ac .ug  E-mail:  science@umu.ac.ug

Uganda Martyrs University STAFF LIST University Administration


Uganda  Martyrs University STAFF LIST University Administration  Vice Chancellor  Professor Maviiri John Christom   Deputy Vice Chancellor Academic Affairs  Assoc. Prof Michael Mawa  Deputy Vice Chancellor Finance and Administration  Mr. Moses Kibrai  Registrar  Rev Fr Dr Christopher MUKIDI  Director Human Resource  Mrs Suzanne Okiring  Dean of Students  Rev Sr Cecilia Draru  Chief Finance Officer  Sr Jane Florence AMODING  Faculty of Science  Dean Dr Richard O AWICHI   BSc (Educ.), MSc (Mak) PhD (JKU) Associate Dean   Fr Henry NsubugaKIWANUKA , PhD.  Dip  (Rel);  MA  Divinity;  BS c  Math/Econ  (USF);  MSc   Maths  (MARQUETTE),  PhD   (Kleuven)  Head of Department, Computer Science and Information Systems  Dr. Richard SSEMBATYA  BSc (MUST); MSc (Mak), Ph D(Univ. of Cape Town)  Head of Department of Mat hematics and Statistics  Fr Henry NsubugaKIWANUKA , PhD.  5 Dip  (Rel);  MA  Divinity;  BS c  Math/Econ  (USF);  MSc   Maths  (MARQUETTE),  PhD   (Kleuven)  Faculty Administrator  Ms Molly Nantongo  BA (Mak); MBA  Administrator ICT Resource Centre  Ms. Rose Mary Nakalema  BSC IT (UMU)  Lecturers  Mr. Perez MUJUNI  BSc Educ; MS TAT (Mak)  Mr Emmanuel MUGEJJERA  B.Phil, PGDE, PGD (CS), MSc  CS (Mak), PhD (Candidate)  Mr Peter KALEMA   B.Comp    Application    (Barkat ullah    University    Bhopal ,    India);    MSc    Computer     (Barkatullah University Bhopal, India)  Mr Andrew LUKYAMUZI  BSc; MSc (CS) (Mak); Dip CS (KYU);  MCP (Microsoft), PhD (Candidate)  Mr Rahman SANYA  BSc; PGDE (IUIU); MSc (Mak)  Ms. Fulgensia MBABAZI (on study leave)  BSc (Educ) (MUST); MSc (Mak); PhD (Student)  Assistant Lecturers  Ms Olivia Nabawanda  BSc (Educ) MUST; MSc (Accra)  Teaching Assistants  Mr. John Bosco LOKOLIMOI  6 BSc (Fin Math) (UMU); DIP(UPK), MBA (Candidate)  Ms Daphine ABEINEMUKAMA  BSc (UMU), MSc (Candidate)  Ms. Eva MIREMBE  BSC IT, MSc (Mak)

June 3 is su ch a day, the feast of "The Martyrs of Uganda". Christianity arrived in the kingdom of the Baganda people (now called Uganda) in the latter part of the nineteenth century


June 3 is su ch a day, the feast of "The Martyrs of Uganda".  Christianity arrived in the kingdom  of the Baganda people (now called Uganda) in the latter part of the  nineteenth century. The first missionaries, British A nglicans and French Roman Catholics, were warmly  received by the Kabaka, the king, Mutesa, who  was impressed that they behaved well and brought no  slaves. The mission went well and the first Anglic ans were baptized on March 18, 1882. But on October  9, 1884, Mutesa died.   The new king, Mwanga, was young, just eighteen. He  was suspicious of foreigners and had a savage  temper. In October, 1885, after a dangerous overland  trek from the Indian Ocean coast, the new Bishop  of East Equatorial Africa, James Hannington, made  the mistake of entering Uganda from the east, the  traditional entry point for enemies. He was detain ed and on October 29 executed on order of Mwanga.   But Mwanga did not limit his fury to foreigners. Al ready in January of the same year Mwanga had had  three Anglican boys dismembered and burned becaus e they were working for a missionary, Alexander  Mackay, who had refused Mwanga's protection.   The worst punishments, however, were reserved fo r Mwanga's own servants. Many of the boys of the  king's court had become Christians. They were call ed "readers" because they  had become literate in  order to read the Bible, which Mackay was translating. On May 25, 1886, Mwanga called for some  servants. Two pages entered, named Ssebuggwawo and Mw afu. When he questioned their activities of  the day Mwafu answered that he had been learning  about the Christian faith from Ssebuggwawo.  Mwanga exploded. The king had learned the practice  of sodomy from Arab traders and Mwafu was his  favourite. Mwanga knew that if Mwafu became a Chri stian he would no longer comply. Three Christian  servants were beaten and killed that day; nine more we re executed in various ways over the next week.  Thirty-seven were detained at the execution site at  Namugongo, knowing that their end was not far. The  story of the last days of this mi xed group of Roman Catholic and A nglican teenagers, led by the young  catechist Charles Lwanga, is one of mutual encouragement, of support for one another in prayer, of  steadfast refusal to recant.   The missionaries were heartsick. They pleaded for th e release of the prisoners. They were not forbidden  to preach but were told that as many as were converted would be killed.   Finally June 3 arrived. Lwanga was killed at the place of  detention, roasted over a slow fire. It is said that  he told his executioners that though they were burning  him it was as though they were pouring water over  his feet, 'Beware', he said, 'of the fi re that lasts forever.' The rest we re marched a mile away where they  were rolled in reed mats and bound. Four of the y ounger boys were clubbed to death to spare them the  pain. Five were given a last minute pardon. At noon  the pyre was lit. Thirty-one martyrs were burned.   The violence of the Kabaka's persecution scattered  other believers throughout the kingdom where more  'reading' soon sprung up. The faith of Ugandan Christi anity, nurtured by the wit ness of the martyrs, has  lived through more recent periods of violence. T he regimes of Amin and Obote have both claimed their  victims: Archbishop Janani Luwum, murdered by Id i Amin, is now commemorated along with the young  boys of the nineteenth century.   Today in Namugongo, in the suburbs of Kampala, there  is a small Anglican theological college. In the late  1980's, in the last days of the regime of President  Milton Obote, the Principal of that college was a man  named Kasira. One night soldiers came looking for so me of the students of that college. Kasira, claiming  that he was responsible for those students, refused to  give any information to the soldiers. They killed him  where he stood. In a world which continues to be a  place of violence the martyrs of Uganda remind us  that there will be a day when every tear shall be  wiped away, but that now we are called to mutual  encouragement, prayer, steadfast faith and self-giving love.   This article first appeared in  The Niagara Anglican  in June 1995. Used with permission.  The Rev. Dr. Grant LeMarquand is Academic Dean  and Associate Professor of Biblical Studies and  Mission at Trinity.  Dr. LeMarquand has written an d edited numerous articles and books, including  Why  Haven’t You Left? Letters from the Sudan  and  A Comparative Study of the Story of the Bleeding Woman  in North Atlantic and African Contexts . He is executive editor of Trinity’s new theological journal, the  Trinity Journal for Theology & Ministry and  international editor of  Anglican and Episcopal History

Collect for the Martyrs of Uganda O God, by your providence the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church


Collect for the Martyrs of Uganda O  God,  by  your  providence  the  blood  of  the   martyrs is the seed of the Church: Grant that we  who remember before you the blessed martyrs of  Uganda, may, like them, be steadfast in our faith  in  Jesus  Christ,  to  whom  they  gave  obedience,   even to death, and by their sacrifice brought forth  a plentiful harvest; through Jesus Christ our Lord,  who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,  one God, for ever and ever. Amen. ( Holy Women, Holy Men , p. 405)

THE MARTYRS OF UGANDA Each year on June 3, the Episcopal Church commemorates the Martyrs of Uganda, the 32 men who were killed between 1885 and 1887 for failing to renounce Christianity – 12 of whom were burned to death on June 3, 1886


THE MARTYRS OF UGANDA  Each year on June 3, the Episcopal Church commemorates  the  Martyrs  of  Uganda,  the  32  men  who  were  killed   between 1885 and 1887 for failing to renounce Christianity  – 12 of whom were burned to death on June 3, 1886. The  Rev.  Canon  Petero  Sabune,  the  Episcopal  Church’s   officer for Africa, explains: “In 1884 Mwanga the son of Mutesa, ascended to the  throne of his father and demanded total obedience from  his subjects. When Mwanga, who, like his father, had  embraced Christianity, converted to Islam, he issued a  decree stipulating that anyone caught reading the Bible  would be executed.  “A group of Catholics and Anglicans at the royal court  of Buganda had started reading the Bible in preparation  for  baptism  before  the  decree  went  out. Afterward,  the  older  members  of  the  group  continued  to  teach   the  younger  ones  in  secret,  and  the  church  continued   underground  within  the  royal  court  and  around  the   villages in Mengo, Rubaga, Kamapla, and Namugongo. “On  November  15,  1885,  Mwanga  carried  out  his   threat and ordered the execution of Yosefu Mukasa  Balikuddembe.  Yosefu  became  the  first  to  join  the  ancient African  martyrs  Cyprian,  Felicity,  Perpetua,  and Augustine in faith and in death. “In  the  two  years  that  followed,  the  king  went  on  a   killing  spree.  The  largest  number  killed  at  one  time,   12, were marched to Namugongo and burned in a fire.  They died singing, on June 3, 1886, which has become  their feast day. The youngest in that group was Kizito,  who  was  only  15  years  old.  Kizito  would  not  forsake   the gospel, even when the king’s executioner pleaded  with him to say just a few words so that his life might  be spared. “As we celebrate these martyrs, let us also remember the Christians persecuted today in war-torn Northern Uganda  and South Sudan, and pray for peace there and everywhere on this fragile earth, our island home.”
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