By: Isaac Christopher Lubogo
Introduction: Heroes Day and Its Legal Foundation in Uganda
Heroes Day in Uganda is observed annually on 9th June, a date enshrined in national consciousness to commemorate individuals who have made exceptional contributions to the liberation, development, and dignity of the nation. The observance originates from Uganda’s post-conflict efforts to institutionalize remembrance, valorize sacrifice, and foster a sense of national unity and patriotism.
The legal foundation for Heroes Day is rooted in The National Honours and Awards Act, 2001, which operationalizes Article 98(1) and Article 99(1) of the 1995 Constitution of Uganda. This Act mandates the President, as the Fountain of Honour, to confer national honours and awards on individuals who have rendered exemplary service to the nation. Under this framework, Heroes Day functions not merely as a ceremonial occasion, but as an integral part of Uganda’s system of state recognition and historical memory.
According to the Act, the Presidential Awards Committee, established under Section 4, advises the President on who qualifies for decoration based on merit, bravery, loyalty, patriotism, and national service. Several categories of honours, including the Order of Katonga, Nalubaale Medal, Luwero Triangle Medal, and others, are awarded during this national observance.
Beyond the statutory language, Heroes Day is intended to serve a moral and symbolic purpose—to inspire present and future generations by reminding them of the sacrifices made for Uganda’s freedom, peace, and development. The day is also meant to promote civic virtue, national pride, and collective responsibility.
However, in recent years, questions have emerged regarding the inclusiveness, fairness, and contemporary relevance of how heroes are selected and celebrated. Critics argue that the observance risks becoming a political ritual divorced from the everyday struggles of ordinary Ugandans—especially when juxtaposed with rising poverty, political repression, and socioeconomic disparities.
As such, Heroes Day—though grounded in law—invites broader national reflection: Who defines heroism? Whose contributions are visible? And how can this day serve not only the past but the future aspirations of a just, equitable, and inclusive Uganda?
I. THE DRUMS BEAT, BUT FOR WHOSE GLORY?
Come this Monday, the flags will rise, medals will glisten, and speeches will thunder across Uganda’s weary skies. The government—read NRM—will gather beneath tents and among the brass of the military to remember its “heroes.” There will be gun salutes, recitals of loyalty, golden chairs, and names carefully picked from the yellowed registry of regime memory.
But we must pause—deeply and painfully—and ask: Whose heroes are these? Whose history are we honouring?
Is this a national celebration—or a state-sponsored costume party?
If Uganda’s Heroes Day is meant to honour sacrifice, patriotism, and national service, then where are the names of the people who bleed silently every day without a gun, without a title, and without a voice?
Where are the teachers in tattered chalk-dusted coats?
Where are the nurses delivering babies with one glove and candlelight?
Where are the whistleblowers who expose rot and are buried in anonymity?
Where are the street sweepers, the soldiers without ranks, the mothers without medals?
These are the true nation-builders, yet they remain invisible.
II. HEROES ARE NOT MANUFACTURED—THEY EMERGE FROM THE FURNACE OF SACRIFICE
A true hero does not need a press release. They need only their conscience.
They are not manufactured by state medals or ceremony. They are made in the furnace of everyday sacrifice. They do not kneel before power—they kneel beside the wounded, the voiceless, the forgotten.
Globally, this is the gold standard of heroism:
Mandela didn’t earn his place through a cabinet endorsement, but through 27 years behind bars for the dignity of his people.
Wangari Maathai didn’t wear medals—she wore bruises from standing up to bulldozers.
Martin Luther King Jr. wasn’t elevated by government decree—but by the moral clarity of his dream.
What about Uganda?
How many of our “celebrated heroes” pass this global test?
III. THE INVISIBLE HEROES: WHO CARRIES UGANDA WITHOUT A CAMERA CREW?
Let us be real. Uganda’s official Heroes List has become a Political Hall of Fame—a catalogue of proximity to power, not proximity to truth.
> “If you fought for the regime, you’re a hero. If you fought for justice, for dignity, or for the voiceless—but without party loyalty—you are expendable, forgettable, unmentionable.”
And so, the names we should be shouting are kept in whispers:
The toilet cleaner at Parliament who scrubs away with dignity so that our leaders walk proudly.
The UPDF corporal who guards our borders on a diet of hope and maize, without promotion, without recognition.
The bus driver who never takes a bribe, who drives through the potholes of institutional failure without crushing his integrity.
The peasant farmer in Tororo who feeds an entire village from his two acres—without a tractor or a trophy.
The single mother in the slums who sends her children to school on charcoal sales and divine hope.
These are the people who pay their taxes, follow the law, believe in a country that often forgets them. They don’t ask for medals. They ask for medicine. They ask for roads. They ask for a government that sees them.
And that, perhaps, is too much to ask.
IV. YESTERDAY’S BULLETS VS TODAY’S BATTLES
Let’s be honest. The war of 1986 is not the war of 2025.
Our enemies now wear suits, not uniforms. They sit in boardrooms of corruption, not rebel camps.
Today, we fight:
Hunger, not just bullets.
Joblessness, not just rebels.
Ignorance, not just insurgents.
Climate collapse, not just military coups.
But Heroes Day is stuck in a sepia photo of the 1980s, celebrating old battles while ignoring the warriors of today.
We need a narrative reboot.
V. WHO THEN IS A TRUE UGANDAN HERO?
Let the people speak—not the regime.
A true Ugandan hero is:
The nurse in Arua delivering twins by the light of her phone.
The widow in Kasese who raises five children on banana peel porridge and unshakable faith.
The teacher in Moroto who teaches physics with one textbook and 90 students.
The disabled welder in Jinja who employs 20 youth in his garage.
The Makerere student activist jailed for daring to ask, “Why?”
The clergy in Mbale who preaches peace and feeds the poor from a garden, not a grant.
The security guard who stands awake while the rest of us sleep—dreaming of a country that may never notice him.
These people don’t feature in newspaper pull-outs. But they carry this country on their backs.
VI. WE NEED A HEROES DAY RESET: A PEOPLE’S HOLIDAY, NOT A PARTY AFFAIR
Uganda doesn’t need more medals. Uganda needs memory. True memory. People’s memory.
Heroes Day must evolve—or dissolve. Here is the people’s prescription:
People-nominated, not state-appointed.
Independent Commission for national honours—not a cabinet chorus line.
Honours across sectors—education, healthcare, youth innovation, climate activism, not just politics and war.
Values-based awards, not rewards for loyalty to one man or one party.
A day of healing, testimony, art, and reflection—not camouflage and choreographed speeches.
Let this be a holiday for the soul, not just a headline for the state.
VII. HEROES DAY OR HYPOCRISY DAY?
So long as we celebrate those who wear uniforms but ignore those who wear scars, we are not celebrating heroism—we are performing political theatre.
We are embalming mythology and branding it as truth.
> A hero is not who the president remembers.
A hero is who the people refuse to forget.
VIII. LET THE FIRE BURN: WHOSE NAMES WILL OUR CHILDREN SING?
In the final analysis, nations are not built by those who conquer—but by those who care.
We must ask ourselves:
Are we honouring truth, or just echoing history as written by the victors?
Will we keep celebrating loyalty—or start celebrating legacy?
Let the drums beat—not for power, but for the people. Let the narrative break free from the archives of deception.
Because a hero is not a memory.
> A hero is a mirror.
And if Uganda looked into that mirror today—would we like what we see?
Absolutely. Here’s a deeply rhetorical, ironical, and evocative discourse, woven in the voice and vision of Isaac Christopher Lubogo, laced with ethos, indignation, and piercing truth, to serve as a dramatic coda—or opening monologue—to the Heroes Day reflection:
And Now Go ASK THE HUNGRY CHILD. ASK THE MOTHER WHO SLEEPS ON TEARS.
So we ask—
Can there truly be a Heroes Day in a land where children still starve on a full stomach of political speeches?
Can there be celebration while the mother sleeps hungry, her last lullaby a whispered prayer that tomorrow’s sun may rise with a miracle—and maybe a meal?
Tell it to the child who watches school fees turn into a myth, while “Bonna Basome” echoes like a cruel joke in the wind.
Tell it to the boy whose father rots in Luzira, not for stealing, not for killing, but for wearing the wrong color in a country where cloth has become a crime.
Tell it to the fishermen whose boats gather dust because the lake—God’s gift to all—was signed away to a foreign investor behind mahogany doors.
Tell it to the daughters who bleed in silence because there are no sanitary towels in the budget—but plenty for convoy fuel and ceremonial chairs.
Tell it to the slum child whose playground is a puddle of cholera, whose breakfast is an idea, and whose classroom has no toilet, no chalk, no hope.
And then tell them: Monday is Heroes Day.
Let us then speak in the only language the powerless understand—truth coated in fire.
Whose heroes are these?
The ones with gleaming medals and bellies full of chicken and privilege?
The ones who never queued for Panadol in a broken health centre?
The ones who’ve never sat on a stone to study, never walked ten kilometres for knowledge that arrives late and leaves early?
These “heroes” come in suits, with titles longer than the list of things they’ve actually done.
They are announced with brass bands and escorted by wailing sirens.
They wear polished shoes, fat accounts, and names heavy with inherited praise.
And yet—
The real heroes carry water on their heads, not medals on their chests.
They balance babies and burdens, hope and hunger.
They rise at dawn, not for parades, but for survival.
Can we really speak of heroism in a nation where justice is a negotiation?
Where a thief of billions is knighted, but the whistleblower is hunted like a stray dog?
Where a man is a “rebel” not for violence, but for dreaming differently?
Is it heroism to oppress softly, with laws shaped like batons?
Where is the ceremony for the girl in Nakapiripirit who teaches her siblings to read under moonlight?
Where is the medal for the boda boda rider who doubles as father, courier, and counselor—on 5,000 shillings a day?
Where is the stage for the street preacher who feeds orphans without grants, without logos, without selfies?
We live in a country where truth is imprisoned and hypocrisy is inaugurated.
And on Heroes Day, this hypocrisy wears a three-piece suit and sings the anthem with crocodile tears.
Let us not be deceived.
A day that celebrates power over purpose is not Heroes Day.
It is Hypocrisy Day.
A costume party where the emperors of old still wear new robes—stitched from the silence of the poor.
So let this be said loudly:
A hero is not the man the president decorates.
A hero is the woman the people refuse to forget.
A hero is not chosen by decree.
They are forged in fire. Baptized in suffering. Remembered in truth.
And until Uganda lifts its broken, unphotographed, untelevised champions—
Until we honour the barefoot legacy of those who carried this nation through storm and scarcity—
Then Heroes Day shall remain an insult painted as patriotism.
A trumpet sound that echoes only in palaces, while villages weep.
Let the hills remember. Let the lakes testify. Let the hungry speak.
And let the children ask with trembling lips:
“Whose Heroes? Whose History?”
Let the mirror crack.
Let the soul of Uganda rise from the ashes of applause meant only for the powerful.
Because true heroism does not eat at the high table.
It breaks bread with the broken.
And that, my friends, is the only legacy worth celebrating.
About the author:
Isaac Christopher Lubogo is a Ugandan lawyer and lecturer
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