Trading goats for care
Even before that tragedy, Lumala said, speaking in Luganda as his case manager at the UCI translated, he had been taking his son to traditional healers, trading goats for care. Nothing helped.
The last healer he consulted wanted to cut off the lump and burn it. Something about that didn’t make sense to Lumala. He could feel the lump, and it was hard, like a stone, not something that could be drained by cutting.
So he decided to try his village medical clinic, which referred him to a regional hospital. Doctors there told him he should go to Mulago Hospital, the nation’s largest, in Kampala, but they didn’t say why.
His neighbors were skeptical: People who went to the big hospital in Kampala never came back alive, they said. But Lumala went anyway, taking his son by boda-boda taxi and taxi-van, bearing a letter from the regional hospital recommending that the tumor be biopsied.
After waiting a week to see a doctor, sleeping at night on the hospital grounds, they had just reached the front of the line when Lumala got the phone call telling him about the car crash. Son and grandson rushed back to their village, Kigalama, about 50 miles away, for the burial.
The car crash seemed to confirm that a hex had been put on the family. That’s when Lumala, already distraught over his father’s death, descended into despair. But his mother — Kiragga’s grandmother — didn’t care what the neighbors said. This could be an English disease, not a traditional one, she told Lumala. “Go to Kampala,” she said.
The last healer he consulted wanted to cut off the lump and burn it. Something about that didn’t make sense to Lumala. He could feel the lump, and it was hard, like a stone, not something that could be drained by cutting.
So he decided to try his village medical clinic, which referred him to a regional hospital. Doctors there told him he should go to Mulago Hospital, the nation’s largest, in Kampala, but they didn’t say why.
His neighbors were skeptical: People who went to the big hospital in Kampala never came back alive, they said. But Lumala went anyway, taking his son by boda-boda taxi and taxi-van, bearing a letter from the regional hospital recommending that the tumor be biopsied.
After waiting a week to see a doctor, sleeping at night on the hospital grounds, they had just reached the front of the line when Lumala got the phone call telling him about the car crash. Son and grandson rushed back to their village, Kigalama, about 50 miles away, for the burial.
The car crash seemed to confirm that a hex had been put on the family. That’s when Lumala, already distraught over his father’s death, descended into despair. But his mother — Kiragga’s grandmother — didn’t care what the neighbors said. This could be an English disease, not a traditional one, she told Lumala. “Go to Kampala,” she said.
Trading goats for care
Even before that tragedy, Lumala said, speaking in Luganda as his case manager at the UCI translated, he had been taking his son to traditional healers, trading goats for care. Nothing helped.
The last healer he consulted wanted to cut off the lump and burn it. Something about that didn’t make sense to Lumala. He could feel the lump, and it was hard, like a stone, not something that could be drained by cutting.
So he decided to try his village medical clinic, which referred him to a regional hospital. Doctors there told him he should go to Mulago Hospital, the nation’s largest, in Kampala, but they didn’t say why.
His neighbors were skeptical: People who went to the big hospital in Kampala never came back alive, they said. But Lumala went anyway, taking his son by boda-boda taxi and taxi-van, bearing a letter from the regional hospital recommending that the tumor be biopsied.
After waiting a week to see a doctor, sleeping at night on the hospital grounds, they had just reached the front of the line when Lumala got the phone call telling him about the car crash. Son and grandson rushed back to their village, Kigalama, about 50 miles away, for the burial.
The car crash seemed to confirm that a hex had been put on the family. That’s when Lumala, already distraught over his father’s death, descended into despair. But his mother — Kiragga’s grandmother — didn’t care what the neighbors said. This could be an English disease, not a traditional one, she told Lumala. “Go to Kampala,” she said.