Rebel: The Life & Times Of A Ugandan Activist by Anne Mugisha


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Rebel: The Life and Times of a Ugandan Activist is a bold, heartfelt memoir by Anne Mugisha—lawyer, mother, and political reformist—whose remarkable life captures Uganda’s turbulent search for freedom and justice. Told with humor, honesty, and courage, it is a deeply human story about standing up to power, surviving exile, and finding hope in defiance.

Born in Mbarara, western Uganda, Anne grew up in a loving but traditional family during the upheavals of Idi Amin’s dictatorship. Her father’s quiet resistance and her mother’s stoic faith shaped her earliest ideas about justice, truth, and courage. Even as a child, she was outspoken and restless, questioning cultural rules that silenced girls. That independent streak, often punished, became the foundation of the rebel she would later become.

A gifted student, Anne excelled through Uganda’s best schools and earned degrees in law from Makerere University and the London School of Economics. Her career began in Uganda’s Foreign Service, where she represented her country at the United Nations in New York. Yet beneath the diplomatic polish, her conscience stirred. Serving a government that suppressed democracy and dissent clashed with her values. Eventually, she resigned—leaving behind prestige and comfort to join Uganda’s growing political opposition.

By 2000, Anne was among the founding members of the Reform Agenda, led by Dr. Kizza Besigye. It was a daring move that placed her in direct conflict with President Yoweri Museveni’s regime. The 2001 elections brought arrests, intimidation, and violence. Anne, like many activists, became a target and was forced into exile. Leaving her young daughters behind was the most painful decision of her life—but it saved her freedom and, perhaps, her life.

In the United States, Anne began again from nothing. Her asylum hearing, described with gripping detail, captures the vulnerability of a woman stripped of status but not of conviction. When the immigration officer granted her protection, it was more than paperwork—it was validation of her truth. As a single mother, she juggled parenting with advocacy, finding strength in the community of women and exiles who, like her, refused to be broken.

Her activism evolved into global work with the Women’s Learning Partnership, linking her to a network of feminists from Africa, the Middle East, and beyond. Later, through her service with the United Nations in Somalia and other fragile states, she witnessed the same struggles for dignity and democracy that had shaped her own homeland.

Yet Rebel is more than a political memoir—it is a deeply personal reflection on love, loss, and resilience. Anne writes candidly about heartbreak, betrayal, and the loneliness of leadership. She also writes with humor about her missteps, and tenderness about her daughters who gave her reason to keep fighting. Her storytelling is sharp and self-aware, balancing activism with introspection, and conviction with compassion.

Returning to Uganda years later, Anne found a country still marked by corruption and repression—but she also found her voice stronger than ever. She ran for parliament and continued to believe that rebellion is not a phase but a way of living with integrity.

Written with clarity and warmth, Rebel will resonate with readers of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Wangari Maathai, and Malala Yousafzai—stories of women who turn defiance into hope.

Ultimately, Rebel is Anne Mugisha’s love letter to Uganda and to everyone who has dared to speak truth to power. It reminds us that rebellion, at its heart, is not about anger—it is about love: love of justice, of freedom, and of the courage to tell one’s own story.

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