Thursday, June 4, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
Insight Post Uganda
  • Home
  • NewsHot
    • Health
    • Politics
    • Religion
    • Lifestyle
    • World News
    • Tourism
    • Environment
    • Agriculture
  • Business
    NEMA inspectors carry out an environmental compliance inspection at NYTIL’s facility in Buikwe District following allegations of industrial effluent discharge into neighbouring land and the River Nile.

    NYTIL Fined UGX 180 Million Over River Nile Pollution Case

    Matiya Kasaija

    Kasaija’s Legacy: Economic Reforms, Recovery Funds and Political Humour

    Deputy Governor, Michael Atingi-Ego

    BoU Reduces Cheque Limits, Tightens Cash Withdrawals to Boost Electronic Payments

  • Sports
    More Than 400 Arrested After PSG Champions League Celebrations Turn Violent

    More Than 400 Arrested After PSG Champions League Celebrations Turn Violent

    Raheem Sterling Held Over Suspected Drug-Driving Following Motorway Crash

    Raheem Sterling Held Over Suspected Drug-Driving Following Motorway Crash

    Noise Cut: PSG Beat Arsenal to Retain Champions League Title

    Noise Cut: PSG Beat Arsenal to Retain Champions League Title

  • Education
    Dan Odongo, the Executive Director of UNEB

    UNEB Gives Schools More Time for National Exam Registration

    The fire is believed to have started on the first floor of the dormitory before spreading through the building.

    16 Students Killed in Deadly School Fire, Scores Injured

  • In Luganda
    Betty Nambooze, Mukono Municipality MP

    Kibuule Akubye Mu Nambooze Ebituli, Talina Kyakoledde BannaMukono Okujjako Okujoboja

    Omubaka Gwetwalonda Teyadda-Abekyampisi Betondedde Kibuule

    Omubaka Gwetwalonda Teyadda-Abekyampisi Betondedde Kibuule

    Counsel George Musisi ng'alaga emu ku kaadi mu lukungana lw'amawulire

    Munnamateeka Wa NUP Atambula Nju Ku Nju Ng’ Asaggula Obuwagizi  

  • In Photos
    Ronald Kibuule at Mukono recently.

    Kibuule Poised for Return as Museveni Signals Endorsement in Mukono North

    Katikiro presiding over the opening of the renovated official residence of the Buddu County Chief at Ssaza grounds in Masaka City on Tuesday. Pictures by Robert Nsubuga.

    Pictorial:  Katikiro Mayiga Slams Masaka People Over Poor Hygiene

    Ismael-Kifudde-the-Mukono-Police-Division-Officer-in-Charge-directing-Nambooze-not-to-use-the-route-heading-to-town-center

    Moments of Excessive Force Against Betty Nambooze in Recent General Elections

  • Profiles
    Brig. Gen. Kiyengo (center) posing for the photo with the members of Nakifuma Rotary Club who promised to attend his book launch.

    CUTTING THROUGH HELL: UPDF Medic Chronicles Uganda’s Silent War in Somalia Through Powerful Memoir

    L-R MP Mawogola South (Sembabule)-Goreth Namugga, Councillor Amiri Kiggundu, COTFONE Coordinator-Kayinga Yisito Muddu and Mr Xavier Ejoyi, Country Director ActionAid International Uganda at the award event

    National Citizens’ Integrity Awards 2024: Unsung Heroes Celebrated

    Shaping Perceptions: Patricia Namiwanda, a Blind Advocate Of Change

    Shaping Perceptions: Patricia Namiwanda, a Blind Advocate Of Change

  • Op-Ed
    • Editorial
    • Opinion
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
Insight Post Uganda
Home Lifestyle

Migrants in Uganda Turn Culture and Skills into Economic Opportunity

Beles BUBU Africa, a refugee-led cultural media project founded by Eritrean migrant Kisanet Tedros. It represents a growing story of how migrants in Uganda are carving out livelihoods while preserving heritage in a foreign land.

Insight Post Uganda by Insight Post Uganda
February 10, 2026
in Lifestyle
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
0
Migrants in Uganda Turn Culture and Skills into Economic Opportunity

On a busy stretch along Gaba Road in Kampala, opposite Bunga Market, a small studio pulses with music, laughter, and rehearsals of cultural dances. Inside, cameras roll as multilingual nursery rhymes are recorded, not just for entertainment, but for survival, identity, and belonging.

This is Beles BUBU Africa, a refugee-led cultural media project founded by Eritrean migrant Kisanet Tedros. It represents a growing story of how migrants in Uganda are carving out livelihoods while preserving heritage in a foreign land.

Related posts

No Content Available

The centre also addresses critical issues like domestic violence and youth literacy, while developing programs for women, refugees, and youth.

Six years ago, Tedros, together with her brother, launched the initiative to address what she calls a growing cultural identity crisis among migrant children, especially those born or raised far from their ancestral homes.

“Our goal is to teach children their language, culture, and heritage so they know where they come from,” she explains. “Many migrant children grow up disconnected from their roots. We want them to feel they belong somewhere.”

The project began with Tigrinya heritage content and had since produced over 1,300 educational videos, attracting more than 110 million views on YouTube alone. Today, Beles BUBU Africa is expanding into languages including Amharic, Swahili, Luganda, Ateso, and Arabic, a deliberate effort to reach diverse African communities.

Beyond language preservation, the initiative is also a platform for integration. The production team includes Ugandans alongside migrants from Congo, Ethiopia, Somalia, and South Sudan. Tedros says peaceful coexistence is impossible without shared spaces.

“Integration is survival,” she says. “We work as one team because migrants cannot thrive in isolation.”

The studio doubles as an economic hub. Youth entrepreneurs, many of them refugees sell handmade crafts, food, and small services during productions and community events. Annual festivals organised by the group bring together families, artists, and businesses, offering rare moments of cultural pride and economic opportunity.

Yet behind the creativity lies a familiar migrant struggle: funding constraints, limited infrastructure, and the constant balancing act of survival. Tedros says the entire operation has grown organically, sustained by family effort and freelance partnerships.

“We’ve never had external funding,” she says. “But imagine what we could do with support, preserving endangered languages, documenting elders’ stories, and building world-class African children’s content.”

Her story mirrors a broader reality for many urban migrants in Uganda; one of adaptation, entrepreneurship, and informal support networks.

Uganda’s refugee policy is widely regarded as one of the most progressive in the region, allowing migrants to work, start businesses, and move freely.

According to Prof. Monica Chibita, a journalism scholar who has studied migration dynamics, this flexibility creates opportunities for skilled migrants to rebuild their lives.

“If someone arrives with a skill, Uganda’s framework allows them to earn a living,” she says. “Urban migrants often begin modestly, but over time they form networks and establish ventures that contribute to the economy.”

Still, survival is uneven. In refugee settlements, access to essential services remains a pressing challenge. Monica Kirungi, an assistant officer with the International Rescue Committee (IRC), says schools serving both host and refugee communities face staffing gaps and language barriers.

“Children learn best in familiar languages,” she explains. “But many teachers do not speak Swahili, Kinyarwanda, or other refugee languages, making education difficult for many migrants, especially in Kyaka.”

Healthcare systems in some settlements are similarly overstretched, with facilities struggling to accommodate growing populations. Youth skilling centres, once active, have slowed following the withdrawal of implementing partners, limiting pathways to employment.

Despite these gaps, migrants continue to demonstrate resilience. Many form cooperatives, small enterprises, and cultural networks that provide social protection and identity reinforcement.

For parents in the diaspora, projects like Beles BUBU Africa offer a lifeline, digital bridges connecting children to heritage while navigating life in a host country.

Yet public perception remains a hurdle. Some urban migrants report being viewed as economic competitors or social burdens. Prof. Chibita argues that such attitudes stem from limited understanding of migrants’ contributions.

“Migration stories are often told through a narrow lens,” she says. “When communities see migrants only as recipients of aid, they miss their economic and cultural value. Education including responsible media reporting is key to changing that narrative.”

As Uganda continues to host one of Africa’s largest migrant and refugee populations, stories like Beles BUBU Africa illustrate a powerful truth; survival is not merely about enduring hardship, it is about rebuilding through culture, entrepreneurship, and the human need to belong.

 

Tags: Beles BUBU Africa
ShareTweetPin
Previous Post

Exporting Democracy Or Gangsternomics? The Us Invasion Of Iran

Next Post

Masaka Priest Granted Bail in Shs 500 Million Money Laundering Case

Related Posts

Prince Paul Kafeero remains one of Uganda’s most influential Kadongo Kamu musicians, remembered for his powerful storytelling style, emotional lyrics, and strong cultural impact.
Lifestyle

Paul Kafeero’s Remains Exhumed as 20 Alleged Children Seek DNA Proof

June 1, 2026
Defilement
Lifestyle

Rape Victim Condemns Judge’s Decision to Spare Teen Boys Jail

May 24, 2026
Uganda Faces Rising Alcohol Crisis as Women, Youth Consumption Surges
Lifestyle

Uganda Faces Rising Alcohol Crisis as Women, Youth Consumption Surges

May 17, 2026
A selection of foods including salmon, garlic, broccoli, asparagus, berries and red meat, pictured in relation to research on how diet can influence natural body odour and perceived attractiveness.
Lifestyle

The Foods That Make You Smell More Attractive

May 16, 2026
Insight Images
Lifestyle

Woman Living With Two Husbands Under One Roof Shocks Residents

May 9, 2026
Nakivale Refugee Settlement in Isingiro District, Uganda, one of the country’s largest refugee hosting areas where thousands of displaced people live and access humanitarian support services.
Lifestyle

GBV Cases Rise by 32% in Refugee Settlements, Nakivale Records Highest Burden

May 2, 2026
Next Post
Masaka Priest Granted Bail in Shs 500 Million Money Laundering Case

Masaka Priest Granted Bail in Shs 500 Million Money Laundering Case

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Justine Nameere and Anita Among

“I Warned Her First” — Nameere Revives Claims About Anita Among

3 weeks ago
The Chronicles of the Humble School Bench

The Chronicles of the Humble School Bench

2 years ago
Lwembuga at Mukono general Hospital. Courtesy Photo.

Public Laboratories ill Equipped to Handle Emergencies

1 year ago
Teacher's house burnt.

Parents Set Teacher’s Home Ablaze Over Alleged Demonic Attacks on Pupils

12 months ago

FOLLOW US

Insight Post Uganda

We bring you the most balanced news professionally investigated by our news team. The Insight Post is Uganda’s News company regulated by the Uganda Communications Commission.

Follow us on social media:

Recent News

  • Bishop Jjumba Calls for Spiritual Renewal After Years of Interrupted Martyrs’ Day Pilgrimage
  • The Rise Of The Sahelian Lions: Why Goïta, Traoré, And Tchiani Are The Absolute Nightmare Of Global Exploitation
  • NYTIL Fined UGX 180 Million Over River Nile Pollution Case

Category

  • Agriculture
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Education
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Luganda
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Photos
  • Politics
  • Profiles
  • Religion
  • Runyankole
  • Security
  • Sports
  • Tourism
  • Uncategorized
  • World News

Recent News

Bishop Serverus Jjumba of Masaka Diocese delivers a homily at Kitovu Cathedral during Uganda Martyrs’ commemorations, calling for renewed faith, unity, and self-reliance among Christians.

Bishop Jjumba Calls for Spiritual Renewal After Years of Interrupted Martyrs’ Day Pilgrimage

June 3, 2026
The Rise Of The Sahelian Lions: Why Goïta, Traoré, And Tchiani Are The Absolute Nightmare Of Global Exploitation

The Rise Of The Sahelian Lions: Why Goïta, Traoré, And Tchiani Are The Absolute Nightmare Of Global Exploitation

June 3, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact

© 2024 The Insight post Uganda - The Insight post uganda. Site Powered by Bookablehood Ltd.

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 !!
en_USEnglish
en_USEnglish
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Tourism
  • Opinion

© 2024 The Insight post Uganda - The Insight post uganda. Site Powered by Bookablehood Ltd.