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Ugandan Catholics Rejoice as One of Their Own Is Tapped to Lead Louisiana Diocese

Bridget Nadunga Gidudu, second from the left, sings with other members of the Uganda Catholic Community of Michigan at Christ the King in Ann Arbor in 2024. (photo: Courtesy photo / Christ the King)

Ugandan Catholics in the U.S. were focused on celebrating their patronal feast day last week when they received another cause for joy: Pope Leo XIV named one of their own to lead an American diocese.

Father Simon Peter Engurait, born in Ngora, Uganda, has been tapped to be the sixth bishop of the Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux, Louisiana. The Vatican made the announcement on June 5, two days after the Feast of St. Charles Lwanga and Companions, a national holiday back in Uganda.

Bishop-elect Engurait, 62, is believed to be the first African-born bishop tapped to lead a diocese in the U.S. During a press conference following his selection, he spoke of a “debt of gratitude” he owes both the Catholic Church and government in his native Uganda for fostering his spiritual and natural development.

And the bishop-elect’s fellow Ugandan Catholics in the U.S. couldn’t be more elated at his selection.

“They are very excited because this is something nobody will have thought would have happened,” Father Geofrey Andama, a Ugandan native and priest of the Archdiocese of Chicago.

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At the same time, the bishop-elect also underscored his sense of belonging in the southern Louisiana diocese he has now been tasked with leading. He first arrived in Houma-Thibodaux in 2007 as a seminarian, and has spent all 12 years of his priestly ministry in the diocese.

“This is home for me,” said Bishop-elect Engurait, who has served as apostolic administrator of Houma-Thibodaux since January 2024 and as diocesan vicar general before that.

A Growing Community

Bishop-elect Engurait’s elevation to a top post in the Church in the United States highlights the broader presence of Ugandan Catholics in the U.S., a group that is marked by tight-knit relations and deep devotion.

According to the Migration Policy Institute, about 41,000 Ugandan natives resided in the U.S. as of 2021. By comparison, U.S. census data indicates that there were only 14,000 Ugandans living in the U.S. in 2015. The most important factor motivating Ugandans to migrate within or outside the country is a search for more educational and employment opportunities.

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Although data on the specific religious beliefs of Ugandan immigrants to the U.S. isn’t available, it’s a good bet that a sizable number of them are Catholic. 82% of Ugandans are Christian, with Catholics making up the single largest group at about 39% of the country.

In the U.S., Ugandan Catholics tend to form tight-knit communities in places where they settle, with sizable populations in Massachusetts, California and Georgia. Church-approved groups like the Ugandan Catholic Community of Boston and the Ugandan Catholic Community of Michigan help strengthen both spiritual and cultural ties. These groups aim to pass on their faith traditions to their American-born children and educate Americans at-large on Ugandan culture and spirituality.

Associate Pastor

In addition to his duties as associate pastor at St. Michael Parish in Orland Park, Illinois, Father Andama also spends a lot of time with Ugandan Catholics in Chicago. He celebrates Mass for the community once a month and is also involved in many of their children’s baptisms and community funerals.

The priest, who came to Chicago in 2007 as a seminarian, said the biggest blessing and challenge of serving the Ugandan Catholic community in his area is the fact that it is largely composed of younger people, including young parents and their children.

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“The people are dedicated, they are devoted, and they make a lot of sacrifices for the love of Church and for the love of their Catholic faith,” Father Andama said. The challenge, however, is that “many people live apart, so we can't really get together regularly every Sunday.

“But at least once in a month they get together and the spirit of this community is growing so much,” he said.

Bridget Nadunga Gidudu is a Ugandan Catholic who moved to suburban Detroit three years ago. She immediately searched for other Ugandan Catholics she could connect with.

“I’ve been involved in our cultural communications through dancing and singing. It helps me not forget my culture and feel like I’m a part of it. It gives me a sense of belonging wherever I go,” Gidudu said.

Joachim Yawe, second from right, and his family pose with Archbishop Paul Ssemogerere of Kampala, Uganda, following a Martyrs Day celebration at Our Lady of Good Counsel in Plymouth, Michigan, in 2023.(Photo: Courtesy photo)

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Inspired by the Martyrs

Perhaps the most important cultural and Catholic touchpoint for Ugandan Catholics in the U.S. is the celebration of the Uganda martyrs — 22 Catholic converts who were put to death in the 1880s by a tyrannical king for refusing to renounce their faith.

The martyrs’ official feast day is June 3, a celebration that draws millions of Ugandans and other Africans to the Basilica of the Uganda Martyrs Namugongo, just outside of the Ugandan capital city, Kampala.

In the U.S., Ugandan Catholics hold dedicated Masses at their respective parishes throughout June so they have the opportunity to bring in bishops and priests from their home country to celebrate Mass.

Gidudu’s community in Michigan will celebrate St. Charles Lwanga and his companions with Bishop Robert Muhiirwa of Uganda’s Fort Portal Diocese June 21. She said it is a yearly priority for her to celebrate the patronal feast.

“I’ve grown up knowing the value of how they sacrificed their lives for the faith of Catholicism. They are people who sacrificed their lives for a real cause,” Gidudu said. “There is integrity behind it when people can stand up for their faith, it means a lot.”

Father Nicholas Kiruma of the Archdiocese of Kampala has spent many years of his priesthood serving in both the U.S. and in Uganda. He pointed to the witness of St. Charles Lwanga and companions as an indication of the kind of vitality Bishop-elect Engurait, a former official in the Ugandan government, can bring to Houma-Thibodaux. He notes that the Ugandan martyrs all held positions as pages in the king’s palace, but knew there was something more important than worldly power and comfort.

“You see these young people giving up all that and looking at their encounter with Jesus as the better option. It’s amazing. I think if [Bishop-elect Engurait] really brings this kind of experience to America in the first place, and to the world, to his diocese, I think that will be very powerful,” the Kampala priest said.

Celebrating ‘Their’ Bishop

And now, Ugandan Catholics in America have something additional to look forward to: the installation of one of their own as the head of a U.S. diocese.

Gidudu learned about Father Engurait’s appointment as the next bishop of Houma-Thibodaux from other Ugandan Catholics in an active WhatsApp chat. She said the fact that he is being tapped to lead the diocese, even though he’s from a faraway land, shows that he must have gifts to offer.

 

“If someone [isn’t even from] here and the pope sees the worth in that someone, that is incredible,” Gidudu said.

Father Andama, who last spent time with Bishop-elect Engurait, during the National Eucharistic Congress in July 2024, said his friend “is fit for the job” and has earned the trust of the Church.

“He's a very humble, spiritual and servant-oriented person,” said the Chicago priest. “He has a heart for people and he's a good listener.”

Father Kiruma said learning about Father Engurait’s episcopal appointment reminded him that while the U.S. is still a powerhouse of financial resources, continents like Africa and Asia are “the new core” in terms of faith and evangelization offerings.

 

“We tend to have more resources now in terms of human resource, people, priests, religious, who can do the work,” he told the Register.

Ugandan Catholics are known for traveling great lengths, sometimes even by foot, to Namugongo for Martyrs’ Day, an expression of both their faith and cultural pride. Now in the U.S., Catholics from the East African nation like Joachim Yawe are considering doing something similar for Father Engurait’s upcoming episcopal ordination in Houma-Thiboudaux.

“I was telling my wife, if we get to know the date he is going to be consecrated, let us see if we can be there,” said Yawe, who lives in Columbus, Ohio. “We get to know the date early enough, we hit the road to Louisiana.”

If the Yawe family makes the trip, they won’t be the only Ugandans in attendance. Bishop-elect Engurait shared at the June 5 news conference that members of his family are expected to come to Louisiana from east Africa for his episcopal ordination.

When Father Engurait broke the news to his mother and sisters that he had been named bishop, he said they “did the Ugandan thing” — ululating, which involves making a high-pitched, celebratory trilling noise. His mother did the same thing at his priestly ordination in 2013, and it made the headlines of the diocesan newspaper.

“And,” Bishop Ungarait said of his mother and sisters, “they say they are going to do it when they come.”