Close Menu
  • Home
  • Celebrity Gossip
  • Entertainment News
  • Featured
  • Photo News
  • Advertise with Us
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube WhatsApp
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube WhatsApp TikTok
BigEye.UG
Subscribe
  • HOME
  • CELEBRITY GOSSIP
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • PHOTO NEWS
  • VIDEO NEWS
  • MONEY
    • Money
    • Features
BigEye.UG
Home»Entertainment News»Kampala City Carnival: Why We Need It!
Entertainment News

Kampala City Carnival: Why We Need It!

BigEyeUg3By BigEyeUg3October 7, 2014
Share
Facebook Twitter Telegram WhatsApp

By Nimusiima

Sunday, the streets of Kampala were awash with a horde of people who poured in the city from different walks of life. They came to witness the delightful Kampala Carnival that was underway. They shouted, gawked and jumped in ululations. The streets were peppered with people shoving aloft their placards, convoys of different corporate companies with their respectful creatively-coined huge cars, people with paint patched on their skin, girls showcasing their neon, glistening bodies, music blaring endlessly, music performances et al. And by the time the streets were cleared and Sunday turned Monday, the carnival, like finger prints, left behind things to ponder. We need the carnival, fellow Ugandans. We need such festivals. We need such celebratory carnivals filled to the brim with pomp and unmatched delight.

carnival

First things first, the carnival merges people regardless of their religious and political affiliations, age or their financial standings, and their color or race. People subscribe to inane norms that make them morph into factions, distancing themselves from the masses. Political ideologies and affiliations bite them to dust. They sear through them and divide them apart. Souls that subscribe to NRM won’t pull their chairs closer to the table where FDC folks are seated in loud banter. They can’t. They won’t. Same can be said of religious affiliations. Yes, we haven’t registered such hogwash scenarios where a certain sect of a religious cult won’t shake hands with folks from other places of worship. We believe in the same God, not so? Well, we won’t indulge ourselves in such; I will delicately leapfrog it and avoid coming off as blasphemous. However, all these affiliations drifting into play, the Kampala Carnival merges and brings together people in an act of togetherness. They celebrate together. They gawk at celebrations together. They yelp and belch together, running on the streets, chanting songs of happiness and bliss.

kcf-1

For a split moment, we forget that we have gullies of potholes. We forget that the state of the city is ailing, laying on a deathbed choking through an oxygen mask. We forget that the traders have been plucked off the streets like lepers. We forget that people have been evicted, on a daily basis, and they are wandering about town seeking for shelter. Here, the movie Gimme Shelter by Vanessa Hudgens comes to mind. We forget a barrage of problems that are plaguing the city. We forget the balls of dust that covers this town. How about the motionless, stagnant, catastrophic traffic that remains whorled and patched together on our roads on a daily? How about faulty streetlights? We forget the burglars that roam this town like devils chasing for morsels; pickpocketing and running away with ladies’ handbags. We forget about the taxi louts, shoving their heads from their little matatus shouting themselves hoarse with an unpleasant stench shouting from under the armpits. We forget the bodaboda folks whose business seem like a script from Fear Factor. All that, we forget and pretend as though we are oblivious about them. We burry our heads in the sand like the proverbial ostrich and sink ourselves in celebrations. Thumping our chests like King Kong in an act of jubilating. The carnival, too, might come off as a PR strategy for some companies. These companies use this opportunity to peddle their services and lay them bare. It works for them. It worked for them, if you had a keen eye. Though, more importantly, the carnival merges people. It might not match the viral Brazilian Carnival, but, what the heck, we had fun, didn’t we?Boatfuls of it. And before the dust settles, the carnival registered itself as one of the best things to ever happen to this dusty metropolis. Break a leg, Jenny.

Related

Kampala Kampala City Carnival
Share. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Email
Previous ArticleKwivuga is back!
Next Article Video: Kitoobero by Viboyo Oweyo

Related Articles

There was slim chance of survival – Jowy Landa on brother’s death

Ashton Events, the brains behind Namugongo’s beauty during Martyrs Day celebrations

What you missed at Stecia Mayanja’s Serena concert

Bakiga Nation marks 10th anniversary with big celebration

Are Ugandan TikTokers Making Money?

World of Sounds Concert Returns to Kampala with International Headliner

Latest News

Coca-Cola Beverages Uganda supports Uganda Athletics Centenary Celebration as Official Hydration Partner

June 12, 2025

Johnnie Walker rolls out campaign to celebrate fathers

June 12, 2025

Shanks Vivie ‘D Reveals He Became Born-Again in 2003 to Escape Worldly Troubles

June 12, 2025

Nutty Neithan Reveals He Was a Dancer at the Legendary Bebe Cool Vs Bobi Wine Music Battle

June 12, 2025

Big Eye Starboss Confident About Winning NUP Ticket for Nansana MP Seat

June 12, 2025
Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
BigEye.UG
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube WhatsApp TikTok
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
© 2025 BigEye.UG | All Rights Reserved

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.