Adolphus Ludigo-Mkasa
Adolphus Ludigo-Mkasa and his companions
Martyr
Bornc.1861
Toro, Uganda
Died3 June 1886
Namugongo, Uganda
Venerated inCatholic Church
Beatified1920, Rome, Kingdom of Italy by Pope Benedict XV
Canonized18 October 1964, Rome, Vatican City by Pope Paul VI
Major shrineBasilica Church of the Uganda Martyrs, Namugongo
Feast3 June
PatronageFarmers, herdsmen and hunters

Adolphus Ludigo-Mkasa, also known as Adolofu Mukasa Ludigo (c. 1861 June 3, 1886), was a Ugandan Catholic martyr killed for his faith.

Life

Ludigo-Mkasa was a Munyoro from Mwenge in the western part of the country. At a young age, he was abducted by Baganda raiders and became a companion of Charles Lwanga at court.[1] Ludigo-Mkasa was put in charge of the Kabaka’s gardens.

Protestant missionaries began arriving in Buganda in 1877, followed two years later by the Catholic Missionaries of Africa. King Muteesa I welcomed the missionaries and played off the Catholics, Anglicans, and the Moslem traders, seeming to favor first one, then another, for political gain. The court was at Nabulagala, with a Catholic mission nearby at Kasubi. It was there that Ludigo-Mkasa began to take religious instruction around 1881.[2]

Young King Mwanga II succeeded to the throne in 1884 at the age of about sixteen. He came to see the Christians as a threat, partly due to German incursions on the coast, and because the Christians encouraged the pages in his court to resist his advances.[3]

Adolphus received his baptism on November 17, 1885.[4] King Mwanga demanded that Christian converts abandon their new faith and executed many Anglicans and Catholics who did not. Adolphus was one of many Christians put to death by the king between 1885 and 1887. He was burnt alive on the 3rd of June 1886 in Namugongo[5] at the age of about twenty-five. His day of martyrdom, June 3, is remembered as the feast day of the Uganda Martyrs.[6]

References

  1. Mubiru, Charles Lwanga (2012). The Uganda Martyrs and the Need for Appropriate Role Models in Adolescents' Moral Formation: As Seen from the Traditional African Education. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 131. ISBN 978-3-643-90142-2.
  2. "Adolphus Ludigo-Mkasa", Munyonyo Martyrs' Shrine
  3. French, Bob. "The Uganda Martyrs", The Word Among Us, August 2015
  4. "The Holy Martyrs of Uganda", Pontifical Missionary Societies
  5. Holweck, Frederick George. A Biographical Dictionary of the Saints, B. Herder, 1924, p. 18
  6. "St. Adolphus Ludigo-Mkasa", Uganda Martyrs Shrine, Namugongo


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