In a passionate cultural reaffirmation, Katikkiro Charles Peter Mayiga has called upon all Baganda to honor and protect their heritage by avoiding marriage within their own clans a deeply rooted taboo in Buganda’s traditional customs.
Speaking during a session of “Embuga ya Kisekwa” on Wednesday, the Prime Minister of Buganda issued a strong reminder of the central role that clans play in defining identity, maintaining social order, and preserving the Kingdom’s age-old values.
“Clans play a vital role in shaping, organising, and maintaining Buganda. They help us understand where we come from, who we are, and where we belong. It is through these clans that we are joined to our King, the Sabasajja Kabaka,” Katikkiro said.
Increasing reports of intra-clan relationships, particularly among younger Baganda unfamiliar with genealogical boundaries, have sparked alarm within cultural leadership.
Recently, a video circulated on social media showing a Kampala-based pastor preaching in support of marriage within the same clan, a practice that directly contradicts Baganda cultural norms and traditions.
Buganda’s clan system comprised of 54 distinct clans, each with its unique totem, origin story, and societal role is at the very heart of the kingdom’s structure.
The taboo against marrying within one’s own clan is not merely symbolic. It reflects a belief that such unions are akin to incest, violating kinship ethics and disrupting the sacred balance of familial lineage.
Mayiga’s remarks come amid broader efforts by the Buganda Kingdom to reinvigorate traditional values in a generation navigating the complexities of urban life, globalization, and diluted cultural ties.
“Clans are more than symbols; they are the framework through which we are connected not only to our ancestry but to our leader, the Kabaka,” Mayiga told court. “They are the strands of the thread that hold Buganda together.”
He urged Baganda to take pride in their clans, to know their lineage, and to raise children with that same awareness reminding the public that ignorance of one’s clan could lead to tragic cultural transgressions.
Katikkiro further urged all Buganda clans to resolve their leadership and succession disputes through the Kisekwa tribunal rather than rushing civil courts.