Canadian journalist Thomas Froese interacts with UCU writing center coaches in the Hamu Mukasa Library on January 21, 2025.

Canadian writer finds home at UCU

Canadian journalist Thomas Froese interacts with UCU writing center coaches in the Hamu Mukasa Library on January 21, 2025.
Canadian journalist Thomas Froese interacts with UCU writing center coaches in the Hamu Mukasa Library on January 21, 2025.

By Christine Mirembe
At a cosy table outside the Eunice Guest House, near the historic Bishop Tucker Building of Uganda Christian University (UCU) in Mukono, I had a cup of tea with the Canadian journalist Thomas Froese.

“There’s a need for people like myself to help build skills of writers,” he said, while we sat amidst nearby palm trees and in a gentle breeze. “So, I came and have been engaged in encouraging training sessions for young writers and journalists.” 

Thomas is a veteran journalist, adjunct creative writing lecturer, a husband, father and Christian.  For him, they’re all things that he can write about. So is Uganda, which feels like home, considering his family had lived at UCU for 12 years.

“We lived eight months a year here at UCU and four months in Canada,” he said of the years 2005 to 2017. “The children went to school in Kampala every day. We would drive them to KISU in Bukoto, Kampala International School.”

Thomas, who was born in Berlin, grew up in Canada’s Niagara Region. He now lives in the Canadian city of Hamilton with his wife, Dr. Jean Chamberlain Froese, an obstetrician. Their children are Liz, 21; Jonathan, 19; and Hannah, 19, a native of Uganda and adopted into the Froese family when she was young.

Thomas is well recognized as a journalist and author with 35 years of experience in newspapers. He’s written columns for the Hamilton Spectator for more than 20 years, often about “news, travel, fatherhood and life.”

In 2009, he published “Ninety-Nine Windows: Reflections of a Reporter from Arabia to Africa  and Other Roads Less Travelled,” which was awarded Best Book (Culture) by the Canadian writers’ organization, The Word Guild.

As we meet just down the hill from the Save the Mothers residence, where his family had lived while at UCU, Thomas shared how he and his wife came to UCU. While living in the Middle East, he and Dr. Jean first visited the university in 2003 as she was imagining a new public health leadership program to address Uganda’s needs in maternal health.

Froese, a founder of the UCU Standard newspaper, during his annual visit at UCU-Mukono in January 2025
Froese, a founder of the UCU Standard newspaper, during his annual visit at UCU-Mukono in January 2025

“The university was very accommodating,” Thomas recalled. “It was Stephen Noll, the vice chancellor at that time, and his wife, Peggy, who were our encouragers. They said they wanted to strengthen the university’s health program and felt our vision fit perfectly.”

The program, a Masters in Public Health Leadership called “Save the Mothers,” was launched in 2005. To house the program in 2008, Save the Mothers and UCU built Mirembe Hall, named after Dr. Florence Mirembe, a well-known Ugandan physician working with Dr. Jean. The Save the Mothers name had originated with a previous program run by the Canadian Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists that Jean was involved in.

While Thomas and Jean raised their children at UCU, Dr. Jean had her hand in the Save the Mothers curriculum and Thomas helped start the campus newspaper, The Standard. With the support of Vice Chancellor Noll, the Standard’s first edition was launched in 2007. John Semakula, the current Head of Department, School of Journalism, was among its first four interns.

“It is very gratifying to know there’s this continuity,” Thomas said.  “People who were here at the beginning of The Standard have returned to UCU to serve and to build the next generation.”

With the newspaper’s shift to digital, Thomas acknowledges change and its inevitability. The Standard currently also prints once a month, but he is optimistic it can go back to printing twice a month, which it did for many years. He also points out the newspaper’s role in building UCU as a community, how a greater printing frequency will help this.

Life is not always a straight path. Thomas has met with challenges in his career. As a freelance columnist in particular, he understands that newspapers are going through changes that can make the profession uncertain. But he encourages other journalists to stay optimistic and remember there are now various platforms for their work.

Another lesson is to read good role models, Thomas notes. One of his is Frederick Buechner, an American author and theologian.

“I will read Frederick Buechner to anybody who will listen, including my dog, Grace,” he says.

During his stay on campus this January, Thomas took part in both organized and impromptu sessions with various students on campus. One session was with the UCU Writing Centre coaches. During that January 21 gathering, he shared basics of good writing with a reminder of the importance of reading widely across different genres, both fiction and non-fiction.

Currently, the Froese family lives in Hamilton, which is near Toronto, Canada. Thomas writes columns alongside teaching creative writing at Redeemer University, in Hamilton, every fall semester.  Jean continues to travel to Uganda twice a year while working at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Hamilton, and teaching in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at McMaster University. Liz, Jonathan and Hannah are preparing for careers in nursing, engineering and teaching, respectively. 

More information about Thomas is at  https://thomasfroese.com.

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