New Orthodox Head Asks Leaders to be Guided by The Motto ‘For God and my Country’

  • by Rodney Mponye
  • February 21, 2022

The newly consecrated Archbishop of the Metropolis of Kampala, His Eminence Jeronymos Muzeeyi, used his debut speech to call for political tolerance and to ask leaders to be guided by the coutry’s motto ‘For God and My Country’ during his consecration at St Nicholas Church, Namungoona in Kampala yesterday.

Archbishop Muzeeyi also asked leaders to be guided by the country’s motto; “For God and my Country.”

“Regardless of differences, I call for tolerance amid our political diversity,” Archbishop Muzeeyi said.

He also asserted that the Orthodox Church stands for good values that his predecessors initiated, adding that he would capitalise on them during his tenure. President Museveni in his message delivered by Vice President Jessica Alupo congratulated the Orthodox for receiving a “focused and able leader”.

“This Church should continue to be agents of positive change to fulfil the work of God and mobilise all the people to solve the problems of illiteracy and poverty,”  Mr Museveni said.

Earlier, several leaders, who attended the function, decried a degenerated human rights record in the country, saying torture, maiming of suspects, incommunicado detentions, among other evils, are ‘eating up’ the nation.

Katikkiro Charles Peter Mayiga, who conveyed Kabaka Ronald Mutebi’s congratulatory message, said the Orthodox Church and Buganda have a strong relationship.

“We should continue to work together to fight for rights of people amidst the escalating incommunicado detentions, torture, rampant land grabbing. We need to confront these challenges together. We need to fight for the common man to up the education, health,” Mr Mayiga said.

Archbishop Muzeeyi becomes the third Orthodox head after  succeeding the late Jonah Lwanga, who died in Greece on September 5 last year. Lwanga replaced Archbishop Theodros Nankyama, who died in 1997.

Short Bio
Archbishop Muzeeyi was born on March 18, 1962 in Bulopa, Kamuli District, to Augustinos Kakombe and Agnes Biribawa. He is a graduate of the University of Athens, School of Theology, Greece where he attained a Bachelors of Theology and Post Graduate course in Canon Law. He has previously served as Bishop of Bukoba since November 24, 1999, and later elevated as the Metropolitan of Mwanza and Western Tanzania on November 23, 2007.