ANN Bulletin Adventist News
Network Seventh-day Adventist Church World
Headquarters
| Ugandan Government Responds to Pleas of
Sabbath-Keepers |
January 29, 2002
Kampala, Uganda .... [Bettina Krause/ANN]
|
Election officials in
Uganda have rescheduled a national election following a public
protest by local leaders of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
Originally set for Saturday, February 16, the election has been
brought forward to Thursday, February 14. The change of date heads
off plans by Adventists in Uganda to hold a peaceful street
demonstration to draw public attention to their plight.
People of faith should not be excluded from public life
simply because government agencies fail to accommodate religious
practices, such as Sabbath-keeping, said Adventist leaders at a
press conference January 22.
“A peaceful protest would tell
the world that we are being marginalized as a church and as a
people,” says John Wani, president of the Adventist Church in
Uganda. He explains that Adventists, who keep Saturday as a holy
day, encounter problems not only at the polls, but in other aspects
of public life as well. “As far back as 1997, our students in
government institutions of higher learning have had the same
problem, with examinations and lectures scheduled on Sabbath. We
have repeatedly appealed to the government and to heads of those
institutions to accommodate our students, but to no avail.”
This most recent incident has generated widespread support
for Sabbath-keepers within Uganda’s faith community, says Wani.
Following the extensive media coverage of the Adventist protest,
“many people, including Catholics, Anglicans, and even Muslims, rang
our office [and said] they would march with us if we announced the
day and time for them to assemble.”
According to Wani, one
caller suggested that marches be held in cities across Uganda to
“march in support of the brave Adventist spirit, for the benefit of
all faiths.”
“Before we went to the street, the Electoral
Commission rescheduled the dates of the election--thank God,” says
Wani.
Although thankful for this latest reprieve, Wani says
that there is still a long way to go before Uganda’s approximately
120,000 Adventist Sabbath-keepers receive adequate public
accommodation. “We appeal to the community of faith to pray for us
in Uganda,” he says, “especially for our students who are being
persecuted in universities and
colleges.”
|
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ANN Staff: Ray Dabrowski, director; Bettina Krause, news
director; Ansel Oliver, editorial assistant. Copyright
Adventist News Network 2001. |