🌿Uganda Buddhist Centre (UBC)
Restoring Harmony Between Humanity and Mother Nalubaale, Lake Victoria
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Founded in 2005, the Uganda Buddhist Centre (UBC) is a sanctuary for spiritual refuge, healing, and ecological regeneration. It blends the Buddha’s timeless teachings with African traditional wisdom to create a community rooted in compassion, mindfulness, and stewardship of life.
Today, UBC stands as one of Africa’s leading interspiritual KinHubs — bridging East and African Indigenous philosophy to cultivate peace, balance, and right relationship with the Earth.
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Goal:$1.75 million USD
This includes $1.5 million for the urgent land acquisition and $250,000 for ecological restoration, education expansion, and community resilience initiatives.Critical Outcomes:
Secure and permanently protect 10 acres of sacred biocultural wetland along Lake Victoria (Nalubaale).
Expand the Buddhist Peace Schools to serve 300+ children with holistic education grounded in Dhamma and African wisdom.
Sustain food security and nourishment through regenerative agroforestry and permaculture.
Preserve a living model of African-Indigenous and Buddhist interspiritual practice that embodies peace, healing, and care for all beings.
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Aligned: Uganda Buddhist Centre is grounded in place, relational, inclusive, and ready to explore KinHub development.
UBC seeks to work collectively to restore harmony and balance through ecological and spiritual regeneration.
UBC is ready for maximized financial support to deepen GrandMothering — anchoring coherence and compassion as economic forces of renewal.
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Venerable Dr. Kaboggoza Buddharakkhita — affectionately known as Uncle Bhante — is a founding Guardian of Indigenous Commons and the original creative behind the STREAM of Value Creation framework.
Born in Kampala, Uganda in 1966, Bhante first encountered Buddhism while studying in India in 1990. He was fully ordained in 2002 by the Most Venerable U Silananda at the Tathagata Meditation Center in California and trained under Bhante Henepola Gunaratana in West Virginia for eight years.
Bhante’s journey bridges continents and wisdom traditions. He founded the Uganda Buddhist Centre, the Buddhist Peace Schools, and the African Buddhist High School, creating the first lineage of Buddhist education and monastic life on the continent. His book, Planting Dhamma Seeds: The Emergence of Buddhism in Africa, chronicles this transformative work.
He continues to teach meditation and mindfulness globally while shaping a living expression of the GrandMothering Economy — one where spiritual, ecological, and social regeneration are one STREAM.
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UBC aims to introduce and preserve the Buddha’s teachings within the context of African culture and to embody Buddhist practice through humanitarian service.
Rooted in the three pillars of its education and development philosophy:The Buddha’s Teachings (Dhamma)
African Traditional Wisdom
Secular Education Curriculum
UBC operates as a KinHub of coherence and regeneration, modeling how ancient wisdom and modern need can meet in mutual healing.
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UBC hosts monastic training for men and women and provides a retreat center and temple for local and international visitors.
It is one of few interspiritual sanctuaries where Buddhist and African cosmologies are held together in harmony and respect.🌾 Permaculture and Food Program
UBC’s agroforestry and permaculture initiatives provide nutritious food to its monastic community and surrounding villages, reducing hunger and promoting ecological literacy.
👩🏾🏫 Buddhist Peace Schools
The only Buddhist-founded education system in Africa, encompassing:
Pre-school: 95 children (ages 3–5)
Primary: 165 children (ages 6–14)
Secondary: 38 students (ages 13–18)
The program provides holistic care — food, education, and spiritual formation — to orphans and vulnerable children. Twenty children receive direct support through the Compassionate Care Program, which guarantees two wholesome meals a day and access to quality education.
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UBC now faces a crucial opportunity to protect and expand its 10-acre agroforestry land along the shores of Lake Victoria (Nalubaale to the Bagandan people — “Mother of the Guardian Gods”).
This land is both ecological and spiritual sanctuary: a freshwater tropical wetland that supports UBC’s schools, orphanage, and surrounding community.
If unprotected, it risks being lost to aggressive development and tourism expansion.Funding Need
Goal: Secure 10 acres for $1.5 million (≈ $150,000/acre)
Current status: 2 acres recently secured through community donations ($340,000)
Urgency: Land values have increased 15x since 2006 due to rising development and infrastructure near Entebbe and Pearl Marina Resort.
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This investment will:
Preserve one of the last intact freshwater tropical wetlands on Lake Victoria — the source of the Nile and possibly the birthplace of humanity.
Ensure food security, clean water, and waste management for local residents.
Anchor an African-led model of biocultural stewardship, where faith, ecology, and community resilience are inseparable.
Create a living bridge between spiritual devotion and ecological regeneration.
“When we care for Nalubaale, we care for our own origin.
She is the grandmother of all rivers, and of all life.”
— Venerable Bhante Buddharakkhita -
Across much of Africa, Indigenous spirituality and healing traditions remain stigmatized by imported religious ideologies that brand ancestral practices as witchcraft or paganism. This climate of fear has led to the erasure of traditional health systems, the persecution of cultural practitioners, and the silencing of those who seek to integrate Indigenous wisdom with contemporary life.
In Uganda and neighboring regions, fundamentalist movements continue to exert pressure on communities engaging in cultural revitalization. Herbal medicine, ancestral ceremony, and Indigenous cosmologies are often condemned or even criminalized.
For spiritual and ecological leaders like the Uganda Buddhist Centre, misunderstanding can quickly turn into social ostracism or political hostility.Consequences of Cultural Suppression
Public Health Impacts: The rejection of African herbal and nutritional knowledge, alongside the rise of processed foods, has deepened vulnerability to preventable diseases.
Erosion of Communal Values: As fear replaces reverence for ancestral wisdom, families fracture, elders are neglected, and communal cohesion weakens.
Loss of Cultural Sovereignty: The inability to honor and practice ancestral ways undermines African identity and self-determination.
UBC’s Response
UBC meets these risks with courage and compassion:
Interspiritual Dialogue: Bhante leads respectful engagement between Buddhist, Christian, Muslim, and traditional leaders to promote shared understanding.
Education: The Buddhist Peace Schools affirm African identity as compatible with modern spirituality and global citizenship.
Public Service: UBC’s humanitarian programs—feeding orphans, restoring land, and offering mindfulness teachings—demonstrate that spiritual life and social wellbeing are one STREAM.
KinHub Partnerships: Through Indigenous Commons, UBC extends its sanctuary model to other African regions, showing that biocultural regeneration is a sacred act.
“The true danger is not our ancestral wisdom — it is forgetting it.
When we forget, we become strangers to ourselves.”
— Venerable Bhante Buddharakkhita -
UBC embodies the coherence principle of the GrandMothering Economy — rooted, reflective, and deeply relational.
It holds feminine and masculine currents in balance: the receptive sanctuary of stillness and the active guardianship of ecological protection.
Through Bhante’s leadership, UBC anchors the STREAM of Value Creation in Africa — demonstrating that Sacred Space, Time, Relationship, Energy, Attention, and Matter can all serve the flourishing of life.UBC reminds us that enlightenment and regeneration are not separate — both are acts of remembering our place within the whole.
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Support the preservation of the Nalubaale Wetlands — a living sanctuary for spiritual and ecological renewal in the heart of Africa.
Your contribution will secure this sacred land for generations to come and keep the STREAM of value flowing through Uganda and beyond.