High above Uganda’s rolling plains, the country’s mountains are regarded not only as natural wonders but also as sacred altars. For generations, they have been protected by a select group of spiritual guardians known as the Abaluuta Nsozi, meaning “those who ascend, keep, or stand for the mountains.”
The Abaluuta Nsozi are not ordinary custodians. They are men and women believed to be chosen through dreams, visions, and ancestral confirmation, and later affirmed by the Sabaluuta, the Supreme Patriarch and Grand Oracle.
Seen as living priests of the mountains, they carry the responsibility of preserving the covenant between people, land, and ancestors.
Their call to service is unique. Many of them experience recurring dreams of mountains, rivers, or fire. Some feel a deep restlessness that only eases when they climb a mountain, where elders or the Sabaluuta himself confirm their role as guardians. Each Abaluuta Nsozi is assigned a particular mountain, which they protect from desecration and misuse, while also guiding pilgrims who come seeking healing, cleansing, or spiritual answers.
During pilgrimages, they prepare believers through fasting, cleansing, and sacrifice before performing rituals at the summit. Mountains are said to reveal signs through clouds, echoes, or winds, which the Abaluuta Nsozi interpret as messages of blessing, warning, or instruction.
Their responsibilities extend beyond individual guidance. In times of famine, disease, or conflict, the Sabaluuta summons them to intercede for the nation. Together, they climb the mountains to perform rituals aimed at uniting Uganda spiritually across tribal lines. Sacred laws are strictly enforced on the peaks, forbidding bloodshed, tree-cutting, or desecration of springs, with violators subjected to cleansing rituals.
The Abaluuta Nsozi are distinguished by sacred symbols such as staffs representing ancestral authority, animal skins symbolizing guardianship, herbal pouches used for healing, and sacred songs and drums that call the spirits of the mountains.
To Ugandan spirituality, they are more than mountain custodians. They are interpreters of destiny, shepherds of believers, and guardians of the nation’s spiritual heartbeat. Every believer, regarded as a dreamer, may be led to the mountains through dreams, and in such moments, the Abaluuta Nsozi act as guides to the last resort of divine power.
Together with the Sabaluuta, they form the Council of Walusi Nsi, which keeps alive the belief that Uganda’s mountains are not merely landforms but living altars whose mysteries must be preserved.