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Mr. Senkayi,

Given Museveni's government actions with regard Uganda's heritage I fear Mr. 
Posnansky afuuyira mbuzi mulere (i.e. whistling in the wind).

A case in point is Museveni's insistance on selling Mabira Forest to 
"investors" so they cut it don wo grow sugar cane! This, in spite of the fact 
that only 5% of Uganda's surce area is covered by forests, natural or otherwise.

We can be sure that Museveni will eventually 'sort out'  Posnansky -- he can 
always find investors to buy the monuments and move them to one or more of 
hotels currently mushrooming in Kampala ...

How come we native born Ugandans do not value our heritage?


ps: 
Mr. Posnansky's roots in Uganda are quite deep: he taught and conducted 
research there in the 1960s, he was involved with the Uganda Museum for quite a 
while. And, Eunice Lubega, his late wife hailed from Buganda.


----- Original Message ----
From: Abu Senkayi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 6:17:47 PM
Subject: [UNAANET] Fly into the future but remember your past



http://www.newvision.co.ug/PA/8/20/534045
Publication date: Friday, 24th November, 2006
 
MERRICK POSNANSKY
BY MERRICK POSNANSKY 

Uganda in recent years has neglected its ancient and historical monuments. 
There are no brochures available to tourists or schoolchildren pointing out 
what monuments there are or where to find them. 

Foreign teams from Nairobi, the USA and the University of London have conducted 
excavations but few of the results have been fully reported in the popular 
media. 

A nation’s monuments are the visible clues to its history. We all associate 
distinctive monuments with certain cultures like the pyramids with Egypt or the 
Coliseum with Rome. Uganda has significant monuments but they are hardly known 
to the public and not always well preserved. Lugard’s fort, a symbol of the 
founding of the first colonial town in Old Kampala was sadly destroyed a few 
years ago to make way for a large mosque. 

An urgent need exists to protect Uganda’s visible past but first we have to 
recognise what it is that we should protect. 

There is accountable pride that the Buganda royal tombs at Kasubi have been 
declared a UNESCO World Heritage monument but much more needs to be done. 

There are monuments from all periods and of different varieties. They range 
from places of significance where Uganda’s heritage has been demonstrated such 
as sites in Karamoja where the ancestors of later apes and humans were 
discovered, to Nsongezi in southern Ankole where the earliest stone tools were 
found, to rock shelters whose walls are decorated with drawings of canoes at 
Nyero in Teso, of concentric circles on Dolwe island in Lake Victoria or of 
cattle on Mount Elgon. 

Other places of great human interest are the great earthen enclosures like Bigo 
bya Mugenyi in Masaka district associated with the Bacwezi legends. There; 
great ditches, some three metres deep, stretch across more than four kilometres 
of rolling country by the swamps of the Katonga river. Nearby at Ntusi there 
are the vestiges of a large settlement with mounds of ancient cattle dung and 
remnants of a once huge dam. 

The great “witch tree” at Mubende hill and earthen enclosures at places such as 
Munsa are all redolent of Uganda’s mythical ancestors. Closer to the present 
time there are Egyptian forts at Wadelai, Dufile and Patiko in northwestern 
Uganda where the earliest foreign imperialists interacted with local peoples 
some years before the first Protestant and Catholic missionaries came to Kabaka 
Mutesa’s court in 1877. 

More recent historical structures exist throughout Uganda. There are fine 
mission buildings and churches, with reed ceilings and drum towers, now a 100 
years old like those at Villa Maria, many classic buildings in Kampala and 
Mengo such as old chiefs’ houses on Kabaka Njagala. Nearer the present day 
there is the site where Uganda’s Independence was declared on the Kololo 
airstrip. Kampala has grown in a virtually uncontrolled manner and far too many 
buildings have been lost before they were even photographed or planned! We need 
to record our history. 

In 50 years’ time our children will want to know what Kampala or Entebbe looked 
like in the 1920s. In 1964 the Uganda Government in its wisdom established a 
national Commission of Historical Monuments in order to schedule monuments to 
be saved for posterity. 

Certain sites, like Nyero, were protected but in the uncertain times of the 
1970s and early 1980s preserving monuments was virtually ignored. 

It is time for Uganda to recollect its past. Among the Asante of Ghana the 
symbol of history is the Sankofa bird that has its head turned backwards, the 
meaning of which is “as we fly into the future look back and recollect your 
past”. 

Monuments are not only earthworks, rock shelters and buildings but also 
shrines, sacred groves and places remembered by the oral traditions lovingly 
handed down by the aged guardians of societies being swept away by 
modernisation. 

Many of these places preserve a great deal of history. They provide details 
about events, forgotten sacred rituals and real and mythical ancestors. The 
names of such places should not, however, be forgotten. In many countries place 
names are recorded, place name societies exist to discover more about their 
origins. 

Sometimes place names occur in languages different from that of the people in 
whose land the site exists and can tell the historian about past inhabitants or 
intruders from another area. 

It is vitally important that the Commission on Historical Monuments be revived 
that representatives of different interest groups such as historians, city 
fathers, the Uganda Society, educators, traditional rulers or their advisors, 
meet together on a regular basis to evaluate which monuments be declared as 
nationally important. 

A building register of old buildings complete with plans and photographs should 
be initiated without delay. Citizens interested in wildlife rightly campaign to 
save endangered species of animals. 

It is just as important to save our endangered monuments as a testimony of our 
cultural history. At the same time a reorganised Commission should publish and 
distribute brochures about Uganda’s monuments. 

In recent years both Kenya and Tanzania have issued stamps, “propaganda for the 
millions” as one expert has termed stamps, depicting historical buildings. It 
is time for Uganda to do the same. 

In 2008 Uganda celebrates a significant centenary, the 1908 founding of the 
Uganda Museum, the first museum in Eastern Africa such a celebration should be 
marked by a resurrection not only in the Museum but in all those places that 
speak to us about Uganda’s past. 


The writer is Professor Emeritus, University of California and Founder Chairman 
Uganda Historical Monuments Commission


This article can be found on-line at: http://www.newvision.co.ug/D/8/20/534045
 
© Copyright 2000-2006 The New Vision. All rights reserved.


 
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