• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • BUSINESS
  • POLITICS
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
When Ugandans ate Soil to cure Aids; A tale of an elderly Woman who fooled the nation’s Elite

When Ugandans ate Soil to cure Aids; A tale of an elderly Woman who fooled the nation’s Elite

December 1, 2019
OPINION: The NRM and Museveni are Wrong on Salaries – Michael Aboneka

OPINION: The NRM and Museveni are Wrong on Salaries – Michael Aboneka

October 26, 2025
Mubende: MP Aspirant who presented forged URA receipts to EC charged, sent to Prison

Mubende: MP Aspirant who presented forged URA receipts to EC charged, sent to Prison

October 24, 2025
Minister Speaks Out on Fatal Gulu Highway Accident, Calls for Caution and Responsibility on Roads

Minister Speaks Out on Fatal Gulu Highway Accident, Calls for Caution and Responsibility on Roads

October 23, 2025
Ugandans Applaud ‘Musevenomics Barazas’ as Economic Philosophy spreads

Ugandans Applaud ‘Musevenomics Barazas’ as Economic Philosophy spreads

October 23, 2025
46 people confirmed dead in a fatal crash along Kampala – Gulu Highway

46 people confirmed dead in a fatal crash along Kampala – Gulu Highway

October 22, 2025
EC confirms 15 Jan, 2026 as Polling Day for Presidential and Parliamentary elections

EC confirms 15 Jan, 2026 as Polling Day for Presidential and Parliamentary elections

October 21, 2025
Tragedy as 4 Year Old Pupil Drowns in Mityana Flash Floods

Tragedy as 4 Year Old Pupil Drowns in Mityana Flash Floods

October 21, 2025
EC Sets Strict Payment Mandate for Parliamentary Nomination Fees

Nomination of MPs for Special Interest Groups (SIGs), EC reminds Aspirants of Dates and requirements

October 20, 2025
Victoria University VC, Dr. Lawrence Muganga, Honored with Prestigious 2025 Global Impact Award

Victoria University VC, Dr. Lawrence Muganga, Honored with Prestigious 2025 Global Impact Award

October 19, 2025
EC urges Journalists to uphold professional ethics ahead of 2026 Polls

EC urges Journalists to uphold professional ethics ahead of 2026 Polls

October 18, 2025
President Museveni Mourns Raila Odinga, Lauds His Pan-African Legacy

President Museveni Mourns Raila Odinga, Lauds His Pan-African Legacy

October 16, 2025
Raila Odinga Granted State Funeral, Flags to Fly at Half-Mast in National Mourning

Raila Odinga Granted State Funeral, Flags to Fly at Half-Mast in National Mourning

October 15, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Sunday, October 26, 2025
  • Login
Sabasaba Updates
  • Home
    • Home – Layout 1
    • Home – Layout 2
    • Home – Layout 3
    • Home – Layout 4
    • Home – Layout 5
  • News
    • All
    • Science
    • World
    Minister Speaks Out on Fatal Gulu Highway Accident, Calls for Caution and Responsibility on Roads

    Minister Speaks Out on Fatal Gulu Highway Accident, Calls for Caution and Responsibility on Roads

    Ugandans Applaud ‘Musevenomics Barazas’ as Economic Philosophy spreads

    Ugandans Applaud ‘Musevenomics Barazas’ as Economic Philosophy spreads

    46 people confirmed dead in a fatal crash along Kampala – Gulu Highway

    46 people confirmed dead in a fatal crash along Kampala – Gulu Highway

    EC confirms 15 Jan, 2026 as Polling Day for Presidential and Parliamentary elections

    EC confirms 15 Jan, 2026 as Polling Day for Presidential and Parliamentary elections

    Tragedy as 4 Year Old Pupil Drowns in Mityana Flash Floods

    Tragedy as 4 Year Old Pupil Drowns in Mityana Flash Floods

    EC Sets Strict Payment Mandate for Parliamentary Nomination Fees

    Nomination of MPs for Special Interest Groups (SIGs), EC reminds Aspirants of Dates and requirements

    Victoria University VC, Dr. Lawrence Muganga, Honored with Prestigious 2025 Global Impact Award

    Victoria University VC, Dr. Lawrence Muganga, Honored with Prestigious 2025 Global Impact Award

    EC Sets Strict Payment Mandate for Parliamentary Nomination Fees

    EC Sets Strict Payment Mandate for Parliamentary Nomination Fees

    UNEB begs striking teachers to assist exam supervision, warns Politicians against interference

    UCE 2025: UNEB Issues ‘Zero Tolerance’ Warning against 13 Exam Malpractices

    Uganda Certificate of Education Exams (UCE 2025) officially Begin today

    Uganda Certificate of Education Exams (UCE 2025) officially Begin today

    Trending Tags

    • Donald Trump
    • Future of News
    • Climate Change
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    Rap group call out publication for using their image in place of ‘gang’

    Meet the woman who’s making consumer boycotts great again

    New campaign wants you to raise funds for abuse victims by ditching the razor

    Twitter tweaks video again, adding view counts for some users

    A beginner’s guide to the legendary Tim Tam biscuit, now available in America

    India is bringing free Wi-Fi to more than 1,000 villages this year

    Betterment moves beyond robo-advising with human financial planners

    People are handing out badges at Tube stations to tackle loneliness

    Trump’s H-1B Visa Bill spooks India’s IT companies

    Oil spill off India’s southern coast leaves fisherman stranded, marine life impacted

    Trending Tags

    • Flat Earth
    • Sillicon Valley
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Golden Globes
    • Future of News
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music

    Miss Uganda finalist Sureya Umeimah confidently eying the prize: PICTORIAL

    Sureya Umeimah: the Cadet Pilot contesting for Miss Uganda 2024

    Top Ugandan Artistes in tears after being denied UK Visas to London

    New campaign wants you to raise funds for abuse victims by ditching the razor

    A beginner’s guide to the legendary Tim Tam biscuit, now available in America

    People are handing out badges at Tube stations to tackle loneliness

    Magical fish basically has the power to conjure its own Patronus

    This Filipino guy channels his inner Miss Universe by strutting in six-inch heels and speedos

    Oil spill off India’s southern coast leaves fisherman stranded, marine life impacted

    You can now play Bill Gates’ first PC game and run over donkeys on your iPhone, Apple Watch

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Travel
    “Hon Gwangamujje” a Youthful leader Bragging about Chasing Mbwa from Igara West

    “Hon Gwangamujje” a Youthful leader Bragging about Chasing Mbwa from Igara West

    Train Services Between Kampala and Mukono Temporarily Suspended Due to Track Failure

    Train Services Between Kampala and Mukono Temporarily Suspended Due to Track Failure

    Banished from Home, Rejected by Family, Serujja still stands for his Rights

    Banished from Home, Rejected by Family, Serujja still stands for his Rights

    OpED: The Staple that Threatens the Future: Unraveling Uganda’s Environmental Reckoning

    The Shameful face of Self-Serving Philanthropy: Exploiting the Vulnerable for Fame and Fortune

    Mukono’s Ghetto Children Celebrate Christmas early in a Rare ‘Feast of Hope’

    Mukono’s Ghetto Children Celebrate Christmas early in a Rare ‘Feast of Hope’

    The Last Piece of the Jigsaw: Dr. Moses Byaruhanga’s remarkable Career in Pursuing Justice

    Sureya Umeimah: the Cadet Pilot contesting for Miss Uganda 2024

    Rap group call out publication for using their image in place of ‘gang’

    Meet the woman who’s making consumer boycotts great again

    New campaign wants you to raise funds for abuse victims by ditching the razor

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
No Result
View All Result
Sabasaba Updates
No Result
View All Result
Home LATEST ARTICLES

When Ugandans ate Soil to cure Aids; A tale of an elderly Woman who fooled the nation’s Elite

by Apollo Tusiime
December 1, 2019
in LATEST ARTICLES, Uncategorised
0
When Ugandans ate Soil to cure Aids; A tale of an elderly Woman who fooled the nation’s Elite

Cunning or spiritual? Yowanina Nanyonga at her home in Mawokota 1989; Photo credit One Plus Project

495
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Some excerpts have been picked from the pages of New Vision (October 2019), and David Blumenkrantz’s publication of 1989.

October 1989. Thousands of Ugandans mostly from Kampala City; The Rich, the poor, Educated and Illiterate were duped by an elderly peasant woman to eat an estimated 45 tons of soil with hope to be healed of HIV/AIDS.

The people thought that the soil constituted a miracle cure for all illnesses, especially the killer HIV/AIDS that was ravaging the population and had no known cure  and even the ARV drugs that suppress it had not yet even been thought about.

The supplier of the ‘miracle’ soil was a 60-year old peasant woman, Yowanina Nanyonga, at Ntuku village in Mawokota County near Sembabule then in Masaka district. Nanyonga claimed to have had a heavenly vision showing her how to cure the people, and she allegedly proceeded to cure two teenagers in her compound who had serious diseases. Word of her miracle cure, which simply constituted soil scooped from a small hole in her compound, spread like a wildfire.

For the whole of October 1989, Ntuku was easily the most visited place after Kampala in the country. Day and night, buses, lorries, minibusses, and private cars ferried people to the place which Nanyonga had designated as “holy ground”. Long queues segregated between male and female snaked their way to the house where she dispensed a mug of soil scooped from a small hole in the ground per person, with instructions to consume it either directly or mixed in water and to share with family members and relatives.

Rumor of rapid recovery from all ailments were spread and Nanyonga’s fame grew uncontrollably. Rich and poor, weak and powerful, they all went to Nanyonga’s home. Powerful people in government used personnel of the then National Resistance Army to gain access without waiting in the queue. Many of Kampala’s rich elite, then coming from the Kikuubo trading area, went to Nanyonga’s and humbly received their mug of soil from the illiterate peasant woman. 

Finally, at the end of the month, the government decided that enough was enough. The then minister of health, Zak Kaheru, ordered Nanyonga to stop dispensing her soil forthwith. The ministry had duly tested both Nanyonga’s soil and several people who were alleged to have been cured by it and proved that it was worthless. Nor had the people been cured of any illness by consuming it. As fast as it had started, the Nanyonga craze died out suddenly. The brief season of superstition was over, and the people moved on to seek realistic solutions to their problems.

Nanyonga’s house in 1999. New Vision Photo.

A vision; Nanyonga’s claim.

Nanyonga claimed that on the night of September 8, she had been visited and instructed by God (in the form of a blinding light and mysterious voice) to cure all manner of illness by merely feeding them the blessed soil from her shamba. The dedication and zealousness with which this self-proclaimed lifelong Catholic and her supporters took up this task transformed a sleepy, obscure village located near Ssembabule in Masaka District into a circus of hawkers, government investigators, curiosity seekers, and most importantly, a multitude of believers.

For several weeks, Nanyonga was a media sensation in Uganda. There had been accounts of well-known herbalists claiming AIDS cures before her, but Nanyonga represented something less acceptable than traditional medicine. Accounts of her purported faith healing exploits dominated the headlines and editorial pages of newspapers, where she was widely excoriated for everything from peddling false hope to ignorantly putting those who ingested her soil at real risk.

The editorial in The weekly Topic criticized high-ranking government officials, who rather than offering guidance to those with ‘average and simple minds,” went themselves for the soil, “hence perpetuating people’s belief in this falsehood.” This belief had begun with the story of Nanyonga’s niece Margaret Nazziwa, and her supposed amazing recovery from the symptoms of AIDS. Newspapers reported that Nazziwa had been at the brink of death before becoming the first to benefit from the divine soil.

She had reportedly been treated at a Kampala hospital, was bed-ridden and could not eat or drink before digesting the mixture of soil and water. Nazziwa’s story was from the outset refuted by some local villagers. The controversy intensified when the girl, who apparently started living it up too heartily, died suddenly of heart failure, coughing up blood. Nanyonga’s supporters blamed the tragic demise on the niece’s lack of faith and her wanton lifestyle.

Aside from the case of Nazziwa, there were at least as many reports of people becoming ill or even dying as there were of definite cures. This caused the Ugandan authorities much consternation, especially those charged with educating the people about the scientific findings on AIDS, and abandoning old habits, particularly promiscuous, unprotected sex

The media prodded the government into action, criticizing the AIDS Control Program for not acting quickly and decisively to counter Nanyonga’s impact. The Weekly Topic reported that on October 26, Uganda’s Minister of Health finally sent a high-powered delegation to visit the site. Not surprisingly, the medical team established that the soil “does not immunize or cure anybody against any disease.”

 Regardless of media and government condemnation, Nanyonga’s pull among the common folk was phenomenal. Whatever the validity of her claims might have been, she had tapped a very sensitive nerve in the public’s desperation for salvation, at a time when the Ugandan government was fighting an uphill battle in AIDS education and awareness.

By 1989, AIDS had reached epidemic proportions in Uganda, leaving thousands dead and entire villages decimated. Uganda was at the forefront of AIDS education in Africa, and groups like The AIDS Support Organization (TASO) were training counselors to work with victims and their families.

Hysteria ensued when rumors began circulating that people known to have AIDS had recovered after drinking Nanyonga’s soil and water cocktail, another man who had been using crutches had thrown them away, and a small child with stomach problems had been cured. Rich and poor, believers from all walks of life came in droves. This included policemen, soldiers, members of all religious sects, and even government officials.

Nanyonga scooping the ‘miraculous’ soil from her compound. Photo credit One Plus Project.

Seeking cures for every illness imaginable, it was widely reported that lines consisting of thousands of people stretched more than two kilometers from outside her humble compound. Seeking only a few scoopfuls of the blessed dirt, the hopeful arrived not only from within Uganda, but from bordering countries such as Rwanda and Zaire. People were apparently willing to wait several days for their turn.

Opportunistic hawkers set up shop all along the route, selling everything and anything one might need. The sounds of the open marketplace filled the air, as did the smells of roasting meat, boiled matoke bananas and peanut sauce. Corrupt officials profited by collecting the “medicine” for car owners who couldn’t drive up to the “treatment site.” At times, the mob would become unruly. There were reports of people suffocating in the crush.

Her house was simple mud and wattle, though there was a group of men busily working to build a small addition.

The soil was to be mixed with cold water only. Boiled water would render it useless. I was also warned that there could be no financial transactions involved. “If you buy it and take it, you will not be cured,” she intoned gravely. “If you sell the soil, you will go mad.”

There’s also the possibility that Nanyonga was little more than a publicity seeking old woman, as the majority of the Ugandan press painted her. “Money is not everything, power is also intoxicating,” The New Vision editorialized. Who knows? Nanyonga, by all reports, never charged a cent for her services, yet at the same time didn’t discourage the attention she received.

Share198Tweet124
Apollo Tusiime

Apollo Tusiime

Multi-media Journalist, PR professional and Thinker.

Sabasaba Updates

Copyright © 2024 Sabasaba Updates.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
error: Content is protected !!
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • World
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Fashion
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2024 Sabasaba Updates.