By Kefa Senoga
The new Guild President of Bishop Barham University College (BBUC), a constituent college of Uganda Christian University (UCU), is a lucky man.
Take for instance what happened to him when he was in Primary Three. The family had made a decision that Usher Bennets Lewis drops out of school. Their justification was that there was no money to pay Bennet’s school fees. However, he was lucky enough that that decision did not come to pass. His aunt took him from his village district of Rukungiri in western Uganda to Kampala, in central Uganda, to continue with his studies at Joy Primary School in Kitintale. It is at this school where he completed his primary education.
At the time, it was Lewis’ grandmother, a peasant, who had been meeting his school requirements. Born in 1999, Lewis did not have the opportunity to stay long enough with his parents. They both died before he began school.
The decision of Lewis’ aunt to take him to study in Kampala, has in enabled BBUC to have him as their Guild President for the 2024-2025 term. The 25-year-old recently won a contest for the next Guild President of BBUC, beating his closest challenger, Derrick Akampa, by a slim margin of 14 votes.
Just as the rest of Lewis’ education journey has been, completion of his campaigns for the university’s top student leadership position was nothing short of a miracle. During his campaigns, Lewis notes that one of the major challenges his team faced was the lack of financial resources.
“Compared to my opponents, I lacked the resources; all I could offer my supporters were ideas. I was campaigning on foot, whereas my opponents had cars and motorcades,” explains Lewis, who says he developed a liking for UCU when he was still in primary school.
He is currently pursuing a degree in Social Work and Social Administration. Those who have been close to Lewis know that a life of financial hardships is not anything new to him. Even in the university, he has experienced financial challenges, particularly when he first joined. However, he was able to work hard and mobilize resources, part of which he has used to meet his obligation for tuition, rent, and other necessities.
Now that Lewis has assumed office, his main goal, he says, is to work closely with the administration, to enhance the university’s academic growth. Additionally, he commits to advocating improved security to ensure the safety and well-being of all students.
Despite having minimal resources throughout his educational journey, Lewis has never shied away from pursuing leadership positions at school. And he prays that even after school, he is able to pursue higher political positions.
From his early school days in both primary and secondary school, Lewis has been a student leader, taking up positions such as head monitor, health prefect, entertainment prefect, and assistant head prefect.
He attended O’level at Blessed Parents High School, and A’level at Kyamakanda Secondary School. Both schools are in western Uganda. In order to be able to meet the financial needs at school, Lewis says he took up several odd jobs, within the community where he lived. He did these things knowing full well that luck is not chance, it’s a toil.
“I grew up working on people’s farms, often seeking opportunities to look after their cattle in exchange for food and a little money, which I used for my school fees.”
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