By Kefa Senoga
In the South African Zulu gospel song, Siyabonga Jesu (Wahamba Nathi), singer Solly Mahlangu sings praises for Jesus, whom he refers to as the Lion of Heaven. Mahlangu’s praises for the son of God are on the basis that Jesus has never abandoned him, even during the time when he “walked through the valley of death.”
That is the song that the members of senior management of Uganda Christian University (UCU) sang as they took to the stage on October 23, 2022, in the Nkoyoyo Hall at the main campus in Mukono, to give thanks to God in praise and worship. The managers, led by Vice Chancellor Aaron Mushengyezi, were thanking God for keeping UCU alive and blossoming for 25 years, in line with the celebration slogan of Ebenezer, “Thus far the Lord has helped us.” (1 Samuel 7:12).
UCU, which transitioned from a theological college, started in 1997. Today, with five campuses and nearly 13,000 students, it has become an education brand and a household name in higher education in the region.
Members of UCU’s senior management chose to pray from the same place with an identical start time of 9:30 a.m. on October 23, 2022. The members, and, indeed, most of the congregants, chose this service because it was intended for a special thanksgiving as the community drew closer to the apex celebrations of UCU’s silver jubilee. The anniversary week, which kicked off on October 23 with the thanksgiving service, climaxed with a ceremony on October 28, where 1,570 students graduated.
Among those in the congregation during the service was a guest couple, whose names many students could recognise, but not their faces. The Rev. Prof. Stephen Noll, the university’s first vice chancellor, and his wife, Peggy, had flown into Uganda from Sewickley, Pennsylvania, where they currently reside, for the silver jubilee activities.
At the start of the service, the MC, Assoc. Prof. John Kitayimbwa, who is the university’s Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academic Affairs), introduced the Nolls whose presence took many congregants by surprise. When Stephen Noll, who was sitting next to Peggy in the second row in the hall, was invited to “greet the people” at the end of the service, the opportunity gave the congregants a better view of his immaculate dressing – a black trouser, a black clerical shirt and a blue jacket, complete with a UCU lapel pin.
He held the microphone with his left hand and freed the right to gesture, as he spoke with the confidence of a father speaking to his children. In the under five minutes that Noll spoke, he asked the congregants and, indeed, the UCU alumni, to turn up for the alumni homecoming on October 25 and a public lecture on October 26.
Peggy Noll was asked to pray for the children who were present, whom Kitayimbwa referred to as the future staff of UCU. Peggy is remembered for having a special attachment with children as she established a children’s library at the main campus, which was equipped with children and Christian literature.
The preacher at the thanksgiving service, retired bishop of Madi and West Nile Diocese Dr Joel Obetia, commended UCU for keeping a Christian outlook both in name and character. The Christian character of UCU is not by accident as this was one of the conditions Noll gave former archbishop of Church of Uganda Livingstone Nkoyoyo as the former pursued the latter to relocate to Uganda to head the newly founded UCU as its first vice chancellor.
UCU Vice Chancellor Aaron Mushengyezi noted that the institution has continued to maintain a positive image and a good representation of its graduates on the job market. He said the university continues to reap from the sports complex that Noll built at the main campus in 2007. The UCU sports complex has a running track, and basketball, volleyball and tennis courts.
He also mentioned the prominence of UCU in the national sports, which has been maintained since the time of Noll as vice chancellor.
“We continue to win sports accolades and, as a matter of fact, our women’s basketball team, the Lady Canons, recently won the national women’s basketball competitions,” Mushengyezi noted.
Because of its modern sports facilities, the institution has hosted the Eastern Africa Police Chiefs Cooperation Organisation in 2017, the Inter–University Games Uganda in 2013, and in 2007, as well as the East African University Games in 2014.