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Browsing by Author "Nambuba, Juliet Wabwire"

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    Imbalu ritual of the Bamasaba of eastern Uganda : a post-colonial African bible hermeneutical perspective
    (Kyambogo University(Unpublished work), 2025-11) Nambuba, Juliet Wabwire
    The Imbalu ritual of the Bamasaba of Eastern Uganda forms part of the initiation ritual that ushers one into manhood through non-therapeutic circumcision. In recent times, the practice has been challenged for ethical, educational and social reasons, while proponents use biblical antecedents to give credence to their practice. The research is situated within the persistent tensions of the colonial and missionary encounter, which historically framed Imbalu as an evil practice and antithetical to Christianity. The study investigates a hermeneutical perspective of the historical and cultural context of the Imbalu ritual, assesses the colonial challenges and community adaptations and aims to develop a post-colonial theological framework that engages both biblical and Imbalu for an appropriate ritual. The study engaged hermeneutics as an interpretivist paradigm, a qualitative approach with an ethnographic paradigm. Primary data collection involved interviews, non-participant observation, secondary document analysis and a narrative critical analysis of the bible texts on circumcision. Findings reveal that Imbalu embodies profound theological themes that resonate with core biblical narratives. They indicate that Imbalu remains deeply situated within social identity, intergenerational knowledge, and communal cohesion. The Bamasaba negotiate post-colonial tensions through ethical moderation, adjustment of timing, and selective engagement with Christianity-a perfect illustration of cultural agency in practice. A post-colonial hermeneutical approach enables a dialogical interplay between scripture and ritual, balancing ethical reflection with cultural continuity. The study concludes that constructive engagement between African traditions and biblical hermeneutics can generate culturally coherent and ethically responsible practices. Recommendations stress a hybrid framework that integrates ritual symbolism, health safeguards, ethical consent, and pastoral guidance to support communities negotiating tradition and modernity while conserving both cultural heritage and Christian ethical insight.

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