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In Uganda, a soccer tournament shows a kingdom’s power

Ugandan soccer fans are used to following the English Premier League, where the game is played at the very top international level. But the competition that gets fans in Kampala, Uganda’s capital, really worked up is a local, amateur affair known as the Masaza Cup.

Eighteen teams compete for the trophy; what sets it apart is the competition’s organizer – the Kingdom of Buganda.

Why We Wrote This

When is a soccer match more than a soccer match? In Uganda, when it reminds people of their roots and binds them closer to their historical identity.

Before the British imposed colonial rule, Buganda was the state in the central region of Uganda; today it survives only as a cultural institution. And yet it commands fierce loyalty from its 7 million people, for many of whom the kingdom conjures a deeper sense of belonging than the modern state. 

The kingdom’s most visible face is as a cultural power broker. It owns much of Kampala, runs radio and television stations, manages businesses, trains coffee farmers and organizes blood donation drives. Tens of thousands of participants flock to an annual fun run to celebrate the birthday of the king, known as the Kabaka.

And they flock to the Masaza Cup final, too. “People have been disappointed by the government,” says one of the players. “So they seek consolation from the kingdom. They see the kingdom as putting in place all the things that bind people together.”

The fans of the two teams arrived at the stadium hours before kickoff, crowding its grassy banks and perching in trees behind the corner flags. The final of the Masaza Cup is one of the biggest soccer matches in Uganda and they had come in their thousands to celebrate the occasion.

Supporters beat traditional drums and blew plastic vuvuzelas (horns). Hawkers sold merchandise branded with the names of local clans. One group of friends arrived in bark cloth, a material used in burials, because, they said, “we are going to put [our opponent] in bark cloth after defeating him”. 

Like soccer tournaments all over the world, the Masaza Cup is tracked by talent scouts and backed by corporate sponsors. But the amateur competition carries a special resonance for players and fans because of who organizes it – the Buganda Kingdom.

Why We Wrote This

When is a soccer match more than a soccer match? In Uganda, when it reminds people of their roots and binds them closer to their historical identity.

Before the British imposed colonial rule, Buganda was the state here, in what is now the central region of Uganda. Today it survives only as a cultural institution, with no power  to collect taxes or make laws. And yet it commands fierce loyalty from its 7 million people, who make up around a sixth of Uganda’s 45 million citizens. For many of them, the kingdom conjures a deeper sense of belonging than the modern state. 

Badru Katumba/Special to The Christian Science Monitor

Ronald Busuulwa, standing on the touchline, pretends to film with a replica television camera that he fashioned from wood and mirrors, during the Masaza Cup final soccer match in Kampala on March 4, 2023.

Those passions were evident on March 4 at the Muteesa II stadium in Kampala, the Ugandan capital, as fans of Buddu and Busiro arrived in team jerseys declaring their side to be “kuntikko” (“on top”).  

“We don’t watch other football,” explained Doreen Nalubega, a businesswoman who had traveled from out of town to attend the game. “We are supporting our culture, Buganda culture.”

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