From the Back Cover
The author of this book is a former head of the department of History at Makerere University, and at the time of publication is a member o Uganda's Constitutional Commission. His immediate family suffered during the country's years of strife on a scale that that recalls European Jewish families during the Nazi Holocaust. He has therefore approached his task of recounting and analyzing the history of Uganda since independence 'as it really happened' with the agonizing knowledge of an insider, and with the passionate ideal of service to his fellow Ugandans. For, he argues, if they cannot achieve a sympathetic as well as a coherent understanding of the roots of the ills that have plagued their country since independence, there can never be reconciliation and reconstruction.
The account begins with a survey of the country's history before independence, and ends with an analysis of the Museveni years - calmer than the preceding two decades but still checkered - during which efforts have been made internally to put Uganda back on the right track and to recover its former character. The book has been long in preparation, and will now be welcomed for its clear-sightedness and honesty. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.
About the Author
Besides articles in learned journals, Professor Mutibwa is the author of "The Malagasy and the Europeans" (Longman, 1974) and "African Heritage and the New Africa (East African Literature Bureau, 1977) and co-author of "A Century of Christianity in Uganda, 1877-1977" (Uzima Press, 1978). Since 1975 he has been a member of UNESCO's International Scientific Committee for its "General History of Africa", contributing a chapter on Madagascar to volume VI. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.




