Abstract
In this article, I introduce Benedicto Kiwanuka (1922-72), Uganda's first prime minister and most prominent modern Catholic politician, and explore how his religious and political sensibilities - especially his vision of democracy - intersected with Catholic thought and historical experience in Buganda and Uganda. Far from turning him into a "Catholic tribalist" looking to empower Catholics vis a vis other religious groups, Kiwanuka's Catholic identity was a core component of his political commitment to non-sectarian democracy, the common good, and pan-ethnic nation-building. He saw in Catholicism the possibility of envisioning political solidarity during a moment of social rupture, and he and his Democratic Party used Catholic and biblical discourse and theology to help undergird a broader political commitment to liberal democratic nationalism during Uganda's transition to independence (1958-62). At the same time, Kiwanuka's prophetic commitment to principle - an uncompromising dogmatism often expressed in religious and theological language - also helped cost him the opportunity to lead Uganda into and beyond independence.