*Shame on Ugandan so-called Historians. *
*This foreigner presents a more rational narrative of our History !!*

Let us get the facts of Uganda's history right
Sunday, 24th June, 2007   [image: E-mail
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article <http://www.newvision.co.ug/PA/8/459/572225>   [image: Merrick
Posnansky]

Merrick Posnansky

*By Merrick Posnansky*

In Uganda, history has been a simplistic story describing how before the
Europeans arrived, there were well-established kingdoms like Buganda,
Bunyoro and Ankole between Lake Victoria and the western lakes.

In the north were Lwoo, people without kingdoms who spilled over as the Luo
into eastern Kenya. There were also less sophisticated cattle folk like the
Karimojong in the northeast. In this scenario things began to change when
the first European explorers turned up in Buganda. First Burton and Speke,
and in 1875 Stanley. His glowing descriptions of the Buganda kingdom led to
the arrival of Christian missionaries, both Protestant (CMS) and Catholic in
1877. Apart from Christianity, they brought blessings of trade and
civilisation.

This over-simplification of Uganda's history has led to many
misunderstandings. The least of which is to give a Lake Victoria bias to
Uganda history, stress the accomplishments of early missionaries and
concentrate on activities from the capital Kampala. It has led to a
misunderstanding of the past that ignores the north.

Research in Karamoja has revealed the ancestors of early humans 15 million
years ago. If linguistics are a guide, early agriculture developed in north
east of Africa and spread south into Uganda. Early agriculture involved
animals and crops like mullet, sorghum and probably bananas. As civilisation
developed in Egypt, trade from the south brought timber, animal products,
metals and slaves. With the collapse of Egyptian civilisation 3,000 years
ago, the centre of gravity shifted to north of Khartoum, where the Meroitic
civilisation existed for a 1,000 years followed by 1,000 years of Christian
kingdoms.

With the collapse of these Christian states and severe climatic change, 700
years ago, people were displaced. The ripple effect was manifested in the
Lwoo movements not only bringing pastoralism, but aspects of government and
language hailing from the middle Nile.

In 1821, Mohammed Ali, the Albanian ruler of Egypt invaded the Sudan.
Merchants went south for two most sought products — slaves and ivory used to
make billiard balls and piano keys. The upper Nile became a boom area with
slavers operating in ways not different from those of today's Janjaweed in
Darfur, ravaged large areas.

Samuel Baker in the early 1860s described Acholi girls being sold for as
little as 13 English sewing needles.

In return for financial subsidies for a failing Egyptian state, Britain was
given command in the Sudan to control the slave trade. First came Sir Samuel
Baker and in 1874 Colonel Charles Gordon, an engineer who mapped the Nile
valley, built a network of administrative and military stations like Dufile
and Wadelai and introduced steam ships onto the Albertine Nile. This
represented the first real globalisation of Uganda much more than the
arrival of four CMS missionaries in 1877, three of whom died within a year.

Gordon's emissaries visited both Mutesa and Kabalega. Emin Pasha, one of the
most remarkable scientific scholar administrators ever to work in Africa,
controlled Equatorial covering the Sudan and northern Uganda till 1888.

Military stations like Dufile covered more than four hectares, had
surrounding ramparts five metres high with garrisons of hundreds of Sudanese
and Egyptians. The fort personnel interacted with the local population,
largely Madi and Lugbara and exported foodstuffs to the north. Dufile alone
grew more than 35 different crops.

The forts were abandoned in the late 1880's when Britain abandoned the Sudan
following Gordon's murder in Khartoum by the Mahdists. These Sudanese
soldiers were brought down to Kampala in 1890 with their families, who now
comprise Uganda's Muslim Nubian population, by Captain Lugard to form
Uganda's first army, the African Rifles.

This history of the interactions between Sudanese and the local population
such as those in northern Uganda was explored in excavations at Dufile in
December 2006 and January 2007 by foreign scholars with support from the
Uganda Museum and students of Makerere and Kyambogo universities. They
excavated buildings both from the Egyptian (1876-88), Belgian period
(1902-07) and discovered the first brick buildings built in Uganda 20 years
before those of Villa Maria. They demonstrated the close interaction between
the foreign troops and the local people and using metal detectors located
bullets expended in repulsing the Mahdist forces.

All this provides a counterbalance to the previous history of the
interaction between missionaries, kings Mutesa and Mwanga, that up to now
dominated Uganda's history.

*The writer is a former senior Fulbright professor at Makerere 2006*
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