Uganda RELIGION
Anglican Cathedral on Namirembe Hill in Kampala
Courtesy Carl Fleischhauer
Wedding at a mosque in Kampala
Courtesy Carl Fleischhauer
In the late 1980s, Ugandan officials estimated that 66
percent of the population was Christian--almost equally
divided
among Protestants and Roman Catholics. Approximately 15
percent
of Ugandans were Muslims. Roughly 19 percent of the people
professed belief in local religions or denied any
religious
affiliation. The basic tenets of all religions--that a
spiritual
realm exists and that spiritual and physical beings can
influence
one another--permeated much of Ugandan society. World
religions
and local religions had coexisted for more than a century,
and
many people established a coherent set of beliefs about
the
nature of the universe by combining elements of the two.
Except
in a few teachings, world religions were seldom viewed as
incompatible with local religions.
Throughout Uganda's colonial and postcolonial history,
religious identity has had economic and political
implications.
Church membership has influenced opportunities for
education,
employment, and social advancement. As a result, the
distinction
between material and spiritual benefits of religion has
not been
considered very important, nor have the rewards of
religious
participation been expected to arrive only in an
afterlife.
Data as of December 1990
|