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Culture
Situated at the heart of the Africa, Uganda has a strong cultural
backbone. It prides over 30 different indigenous languages belonging
to five distinct linguistic groups, and an equally diverse cultural
mosaic of music, art and handicrafts. The country’s most ancient
inhabitants, confined to the hilly southwest, are the Batwa and
Bambuti Pygmies, relics of the hunter-gatherer cultures that once
occupied much of East Africa to leave behind a rich legacy of rock
paintings, such as those at the Nyero Rock Shelter near Kumi.
At the cultural
core of modern-day Uganda lie the Bantu-speaking kingdoms of Buganda,
Bunyoro, Ankole and Toro, whose traditional monarchs – reinstated
in the 1990s after having been abolished by President Milton Obote
in 1967. Visit historical sites where the three former kings of
Buganda were buried in an impressive traditional thatched building
at the Kasubi Tombs in Kampala.
In the northeast learn of the presence
of the Karimojong, traditional pastoralists whose lifestyle and
culture is reminiscent of the renowned Maasai, and in the northwest
by a patchwork of agricultural peoples whose Nilotic languages and
cultures are rooted in what is now Sudan. The Rwenzori foothills
are home to the hardy Bakonjo, whose hunting shrines are dedicated
to a one-legged, one-armed, one-eyed pipe-smoking spirit known as
Kalisa, while the Bagisu of the Mount Elgon region are known for
their colourful Imbalu ceremony, an individual initiation of young
boys to manhood that peaks in activity in and around August of every
year.
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