RSS Feeds:  

Content on this page requires a newer version of Adobe Flash Player.

Get Adobe Flash player

Behind the Mask | The Voice of Africa's LGBTI Community

Africa's LGBTI News Leader

Contacts

Tel: 011 403 5566
Fax: 011 403 5567
Email: info@mask.org.za
Email Address:

Previous page
 
Send by email | Share on Facebook | Print This Post


LGBTI ACTIVISTS IN HEARTFELT TRIBUTE TO UGANDA’S DAVID KATO AT REMEMBRANCE MASS

Gay rights activists in Uganda on Thursday paid tribute to murdered gay rights defender, David Kato, one year after his murder.

More than 100 activists, human rights defenders and allies to Uganda’s gay community remembered David Kato as a distinguished campaign for equality at a memorial service in held in Kampala.

His killer, Nsubuga Sydney, was sentenced to 30 years in jail on his own plea of guilty when charged with killing Kato.

Bishop Christopher Senyonjo during the David Kato remembrance mass

Retired Bishop Christopher Senyonjo, the head of the St. Paul Reconciliation and Equality Centre (SPREC) and US based pastor, Joseph Tolton said the mass.

Kato’s mother, sisters and family members attended the function.

Known to the Ugandan LGBTI community as Nnalongo (mother of twins) Kato’s mother said she was thankful for the love extended to her in the last one year since her son’s death.

She said often Kato’s friends had shown her “love, care and compassion” whenever she had been depressed thinking of her son, and that this generosity of spirit had kept her going.

Bishop Senyonjo spoke of David Kato as a selfless leader who served the gay community in Uganda to challenge discrimination and stigma for homosexuals. “I respect you all homosexuals. And my message is a message of love as God’s children,” Bishop Senyonjo said during the sermon.

Pastor Tolton said he stood by the US Episcopalian Church’s inclusion of gay ministers in the church. He said, “The fear that was meant to be instilled in the Ugandan homosexual community after Kato’s death had been broken by God.”

Bishop Senyonjo said that Kato lives on, and that although he had been killed to instil fear among the Ugandan gay community, homosexuals had prevailed.

One after the other, friends of David Kato spoke of him as a leader saying he had leadership qualities worth emulating, while others prayed for his soul to rest in peace.

One activist, Moses Kimbugwe, challenged the gay movement to set up an education fund for homosexuals who dropped out of school due to stigma and discrimination. “This was one of David Kato’s dreams. I challenge all of us to find ways of setting up this education fund,” Kimbugwe said.

Other activists who paid tribute to Kato included Frank Mugisha, the head of Sexual Minorities Uganda ( SMUG) where Kato worked, John Wambere, and Thomas Ndayigiragije, an official with Amnesty International’s, Kampala office.

They all praised David for the good work he had done. Mugisha said Kato was the Godfather of gay rights activism and challenged all activists to carry his vision and mission forth. Ndayiragije said it is not how long some one live that matters, but what they have done in life.

He added that Kato lives on. He said his name would always be remembered.

This entry was posted on Thursday, January 26th, 2012 at 2:20 pm and is filed under Breaking News, Human Rights Monitor, Religion, Uganda. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “LGBTI ACTIVISTS IN HEARTFELT TRIBUTE TO UGANDA’S DAVID KATO AT REMEMBRANCE MASS”

  1. stevenkasiko says:

    Alot will will be remembered from you may your soul rest in peace. We shall continue with the struggle for equality until its realised in Uganda

Leave a Comment