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Home Politics

Fred Rwigyema: In Memoriam- Part four : How Ugandans remember Rwigyema

byFAUSTIN MUGABE
December 7, 2020
in Politics
0
Major General Fred Gisa Rwigyema was a  Rwandan politician and military officer who died in October 1990. CREDIT: Web image

Major General Fred Gisa Rwigyema was a Rwandan politician and military officer who died in October 1990. CREDIT: Web image

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To be a soldier, Rupert Everett once said, “one needs that special gene, that extra something, that enables a person to jump into one on one combat, something, after all, that is unimaginable to most of us, as we are simply not brave enough.” Not many soldiers’ exploits have attracted immense interest as that of Fred Rwigyema. In part four of our series, ‘Fred Rwigyema: In Memoriam’ we explore how Ugandans remember Rwigyema.

BY FAUSTIN MUGABE

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This year marks 30 years since Maj. Gen. Fred Rwigyema died.

On October 1, 1990, Maj. Gen. Fred Gisa Rwigyema led a force of about 2,500 Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) fighters who had deserted the Uganda army to wage war against the Rwanda government.

Tragically, on the second day of the war, October 2, 1990, Rwigyema was killed in action on the frontline, a few kilometres inside Rwanda at Mirama Hills on the Uganda-Rwanda border.

News of his death shocked Ugandans as they could not believe that the Luweero Bush War veteran had breathed his last.

To friends and fellow combatants of the Luweero war, it was tragic that the first bullet ever to hit Rwigyema also killed him. A Ugandan, who was a friend of Rwigyema, told this reporter on condition of anonymity that during the Luweero Bush War, Rwigyema was never shot and that the only heavy scars on his body were on the belly – which he sustained in 1983 as he crawled on his belly under heavy fire from the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA) led by fierce UNLA commander Maj. Gen. David Oyite Ojok. For a long distance, the fighters crawled to avoid being shot by the enemy.

But when Ugandans finally accepted the reality that the Luweero Bush War hero was no more, those who could not personally deliver their condolences to the bereaved family, used the Ugandan media, including the defunct Weekly Topic newspaper, to deliver their eulogies.

Faustin Mugabe picked some of the poems published in memory of Rwigyema. Below, some are reproduced verbatim.

Eulogy for Rwigyema

By Philip R. Winyi

[Winyi is the elder brother of late Brigadier Noble Mayombo and Major Okwiri Rwaboni.

When in the west I first fell upon you, my Lord

Your tall elegance, like the Rwenzoris

Stunned, dwarfed and atomized me!

Your physique, strength and sheer enormous

Like the Ruwenzori’s, midgeted and shrunk me

Your light-footed swiftness, flashy eyedness

Your ramrod-like the Nyamwamba River

Engulfed, entranced and swallowed me whole

I fell for you, adored you and swore to follow you

To our own Jerusalem, Judea and to the ends of the earth…

And now you neither smile nor feel my Lord!

Your gracious, cherubic voice still haunts my inside

Your modest: “How are you sir?”

Your respectful: “Mukama wange kiki?”

Wrenches hot tears and reddens my eye

Sets a quiver upon my lip

Hoarsens and roughens my throat

Wobbles my feet…

And now the earth must shake with terror!

Every inch of the earth, my Lord!

The sons and daughters of envy, greed and villainy

Must burn in the furnace of our anguish

And the next of kin to tyranny and treachery

Must perish in the abyss of their creation till none be there

The cause for which you lived and died, my Lord

Must live

Must bear radiant light for mortal man…

Whenever you wrote and signed, my Lord

You ended thus: ALUTA CONTINUA…

Published, Weekly Topic, November 23, 1990.

In memory of Major General Fred Rwigyema

[Anonymous]

Fred has died for his country

At the age of thirty-three

He gave his life for all Rwandese

In quest of freedom, unity and peace

He left behind a loving widow,

A three-year of junior Kiddo

And a cute little baby girlie

To claim their abode in Kigali

Fred loved his adopted home

And fought his best for its freedom;

But as all logic would dictate

He kept in mind Rwanda’s fate

Strong in his patriotic stand

Fred could never understand

How a frail factionalist band

Dared confiscate the motherland

That was Fred’s creed,

His dream to end the greed of

Few fascist brothers

Wearing factional blinkers

Let us honour his martyrdom

With dedication to freedom

In anti-sectarian catharsis

For a God-ordained symbiosis

Published, Weekly Topic, December 14, 1990

Who is who?

That split the milk that caused disunity

That did not see, that wasted the bullet

A curse to him

Fred! You can hear, dear

But you fought many, 79 you faced them;

You saved lives, from Mountains of the moon,

And mountain of Elgon

Many would help to honour you,

Though gone the foe stands

Time had come to have identity

But, the cause has caused destiny;

Deprived the rights and rites

Deserved a curse to him

Like Abel you are slain; slain in cold blood

Your love still vivid and ever

The undying desire to free man

But surely who? That is uncouth,

That sold you down the river; a curse to him

I demand to know don’t you…? Who did it?

It will always haunt us

Sankara wounds still fresh, fresh and dripping-unnursed

You followed suit; ha, a curse to him

You’re gone – it is finished: as he said

I suppose you too said, a curse to

He who pulled the trigger, to spoil the milk, he who…ha…

Let’s us pray; Lord…

May Fred’s soul rest in eternity?

May the struggle…and mission be accomplished

Amen

  • Published, Weekly Topic, December 14, 1990
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