Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 March 2021
Our foes have chosen, out of complete jealousy, to denigrate our name by calling us a religious organization. There is nothing farther from the truth. We are a band of well-intentioned men and women out to do good. If this is not enough let me, Sir, extend an open invitation to all your African readers to join our camp. Come ye all. Come ye Muslims, Protestants, pagans, Catholics. Come to our camp. Join in this great struggle to bring light to the people of this country.
∼Benedicto K. M. Kiwanuka, 1958In the midst of an August 1967 speech on democracy to the Makerere University student guild, Benedicto Kiwanuka made a remarkable claim. Following the lead of Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere among others, President Milton Obote and his Uganda People's Congress (UPC) had justified Uganda's continuing drift toward a one-party system by labelling it a uniquely ‘African’ form of democracy. Kiwanuka scoffed at this claim. Uganda's political system was not the embodiment of some kind of uniquely inculturated, ‘African’ democracy. Rather than a praiseworthy example of political inculturation, Uganda's political system was an oligarchy ‘where a few people govern for their own interests, unconcerned about the views of the majority Democracy’. Kiwanuka went on to assert that political systems like democracy or socialism
cannot be known in terms of continents. Africa is a Continent and not a race or government […] Our behaviour varies from region to region, or probably, from tribe to tribe. A Fulani in Nigeria is as different in behavior in ordinary life from a Muluhia in Kenya as a Somali is from a Greek […] apart from our colour Africa has nothing to make us Black men one.’
To say that such comments cut against the grain of 1960s pan-Africanism would be an understatement. When Kiwanuka gave this speech in 1967, the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) was four years old. Tanzania hosted anti-apartheid freedom fighters from South Africa, and Congolese President Joseph Mobutu was about to launch his authenticité campaign in the soonto- be-renamed Zaire. In the world of religion, the Kenyan scholar John Mbiti was publishing his groundbreaking work theorising African Religions and Philosophy, and even Pope Paul VI would stand in Kampala exactly two years later and proclaim to a continent, ‘You can, and you must, have an African Christianity.’
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