HeroPress: Indebted: The Ugandan WordPress Dream that Flew to Asia – Ebbanja: Ekirooto kya Uganda ekyagenda e Buyindi

Emboozi eno weeri ne mu Luganda.
There are moments in life when you sit back, look around, and just shake your head in disbelief. The kind where you ask yourself, “Eh! Is this really me?”
This is one of those moments.
The word indebted is typically associated with money—a debt to be repaid. But there is a different kind of indebtedness—one that defines my life now: feeling grateful or obligated because of a benefit, help, or kindness received. It’s the feeling I have today for the global WordPress community. This isn’t a financial report; it’s a profound acknowledgment that my life, my sense of community, and my geographical freedom were purchased not with cash, but with kindness.
I write this essay to the dreamers in my home country of Uganda. To the beginner still figuring out what “plugin” means. To the developer grinding through tutorials at midnight. To anyone who believes that global stages are “for other people”. They are not. This is our story, and it is built on the backbone of WordPress.From Doubting Thomas to WordPress Events Supporter
For a long time, my relationship with WordPress was purely transactional. It was a tool, a way to build a website, a path toward earning a living. The community aspect was a side benefit, a place for troubleshooting, like the endless “try clearing cache” conversations. Because of this many people have gone around with the WordPress is dead jokes which is not the actual reality
But WordPress is not just about websites; it is about people. Real people who show up, who share, who guide, and who open doors you didn’t even know existed.
Like I have explained before, I was not always the full of faith kind of guy. I always had doubts and so many reservations. I started using WordPress because a friend of mine invited me to. Just to test and see how things work. Nothing serious. When I started using WordPress, life started changing and now I have hit another milestone. WordPress keeps pulling me and locking me in.
The Software, the Community, the family (in Uganda we call it a family because of how fast we come through for each other). After a few series of attending meetups and WordCamps a friend asked me to speak at a WordCamp and my life took another turn. It was so beautiful to contribute to communities. I started sharing in meetup and WordCamps, both locally and internationally but I had never thought about organizing a flagship event.
WordPress transformed my way of seeing people and my approach to community also took a turn for the better. I met people that appreciated all efforts regardless of how small.
This journey from self-doubt to mentoring WordCamps was a slow-burn realization of the power of community. The small efforts, the meetups, the training sessions, and all the nitty-gritties actually mattered. The WordPress community brought me so far, allowing me to celebrate the path I was on.The Dream that Flew to Mumbai
The dream of organizing a flagship event had always been tucked away in my heart. When I saw the call for Organizers for a Flagship event, I noticed a chance to fit all this community work into a larger purpose.
I knew it would take a lot of effort and the cross would be heavy, but I didn’t care; I wanted to carry it. I also didn’t think they would choose me because I had been turned down before by another flagship. I was ready for whatever the response but I was also ready to put in the hours and work required.
The challenge was immediate and geographical. The event was WordCamp Asia 2026, happening in Mumbai, India. The idea of my passport getting that Indian immigration stamp felt like a fantasy. My confidence was limited to what I thought was possible: “Apply and you will be a remote organiser”.
During the organizer vetting and orientation process, the interviewer kept returning to one question: Could I make it to Mumbai?
In my heart of hearts, I knew the answer. I kept firmly responding that I could not afford that much, but I would offer all the required remote support. I was already offering my time and effort; I just couldn’t solve the geographic puzzle and yet I really wanted to be a part of the team.
Then, during one of the calls, I received a link to apply for the Open Horizons Scholarship from Automattic.
The moment I read the mission statement, everything clicked. It aims to increase equitable access to WordPress events by providing financial support to contributors from underrepresented, underserved, or economically disadvantaged backgrounds. This was written for me. This was written for us.
With all faith and hope, I filled in the application and waited. I was praying that they would choose me, praying that this new dream could become a reality.The Game Changer: Geographical Freedom
A few days later, I received the email confirming my selection. Even now, it still feels like one of those emails you reread five times to confirm it’s not a scam. You know those ones that start with “Congratulations” and you check the sender twice before your heart accepts the joy? Yes, that one.
I was in shock. I was excited. I was amazed.
This scholarship was not just about me boarding a plane to Mumbai; it was a physical manifestation of geographical freedom. It was a reminder that somewhere, someone saw value in what I do.
My life changed, the way I walk changed, the way I speak changed, the way I see things changed and everything changed. The scholarship made me international. I ceased to be local events organizer to Flagship event Organizer
Travelling to attend a flagship event is a very interesting thought but for me, it started with a passport that had more hope than stamps.
Then came the india visa process.
Let me be honest, it was not smooth. Not even close. I faced rejection. Once. Twice. Three times. Each one comes with the same polite but painful message that basically says, “Not this time.”
And each time, you start to question yourself again.
“Maybe it’s not for me, Maybe I should just stay back here.”
But something interesting happened in the middle of those rejections. As I kept trying, learning, asking questions, and understanding the process better… I started helping others.
Friends would reach out:
“Bro, how did you apply?”
“What documents did you use?”
“What do they want exactly?”
And me, the same person being rejected started guiding others. Reviewing applications. Sharing lessons. Giving the details the visa sites and agents were not giving.
And guess what? All of them got their visas. On time. Successfully. Including my wife.
Meanwhile, I was still struggling to get mine.
Life can be funny like that
But on the fourth attempt… it came through.
That approval message hit differently. It was not just excitement. It was relief. It was validation. It was a quiet whisper saying, “You were not crazy to keep trying.”
Leaving Home
Preparing to travel felt like preparing for an exam you didn’t fully revise for.
Packing was a whole experience. You pack, unpack, remove things, add them again. You even start questioning if you really need five shirts for a few days. (The answer is yes… just in case
)
Then came the airport.
That one is not for the faint-hearted. The walking. The checking. The “please step aside.” The looking confident even when inside you’re just praying you don’t miss a step.
But the real moment?
Sitting in that plane.
Seatbelt on. Heart beating. Thoughts running.
Then the engine roars… and the plane starts moving.
Slowly… then faster… then suddenly you are off the ground.
I looked out the window and saw Uganda getting smaller.
And in that moment, it hit me:
The barrier is gone.
The thing that felt impossible was now happening in real time. No more imagination. No more “one day.” This was the day.
The Feeling of Being Seen
Being “seen” is not loud. It’s not always people clapping for you.
Sometimes it’s quiet.
It’s in the opportunity you’ve been given.
It’s in the doors that open without you forcing them.
It’s in realizing that your effort, your consistency, your presence matters.
For me, being seen looked like this journey.
From struggling with visas… to finally holding one.
From helping others succeed… to eventually getting my own breakthrough.
From wondering if I belong… to being welcomed on a global stage.
It was not instant. It was layered. Built over time.
And now, as I step into this experience, I carry all of it with me — the rejections, the lessons, the small wins, the people I helped along the way.
Because in the end, this is not just about travel.
It’s about growth.
It’s about persistence.
It’s about a reminder that sometimes… delay is not denial.
It’s preparation.
And when your moment comes, you will know that this was always bigger than you.
We arrived in Mumbai very early in the morning (4 am India Standard Time). What followed was a hospitality unexpected, a love unfathomable. From the Uber driver who took us to the hotel to the “Kaali-Peeli” (taxi) and even the tuk-tuk driver. Everyone was kind. Even though the summer sun was out for its show-off party, the A/C was properly equipped for the tantrums. Mumbai was beautiful.
The reception from the WordPress community itself was beyond belief. People checked on me to ensure I arrived safely, to see if I needed anything, if all my affairs were in order. I saw so many people whom I had only chatted with digitally on Slack and now it was no longer just a text and image, but a face and a voice. It was a beautiful experience. There were people who lent me money because my VISA card was not working, and they had no fear that I may run off. That is the definition of a trustworthy, supportive community. That is the leverage WordPress gave me: friends that feel like family across the globe.
Indebted to the Pioneers
This moment of freedom and connection didn’t happen in a vacuum. Opportunities like the Open Horizons Scholarship are built on the backs of people who contributed before I even knew what WordPress was.
They are the people who wrote documentation.
They are the people who fixed bugs at 2 AM.
They are the people who organized WordCamps when the attendance was just their friends and cousins.
We, the beneficiaries, are enjoying the fruits of a tree we did not plant but we are now called to water it. That realization humbles me deeply.
Indebted… but Also Responsible
Being indebted is not just about saying “thank you” (though, sincerely, thank you). It comes with responsibility. The scholarship changed me. I became more careful, knowing that people see me and my actions; every little thing that I ignored was being seen. This was the true game changer.
My responsibility means four things:
- Showing up fully: Being fully present in my role as an organizer and contributor.
- Learning intentionally: Absorbing the expertise and experience of the global community.
- Connecting genuinely: Building real relationships that bridge continents.
- Bringing the knowledge back home: Ensuring this experience benefits the community in Uganda.
This is not just my win. It is for the community in Uganda. This global experience is a call to mentor and continue pushing WordPress to the ends of the world. It’s about how much you love. Let us echo WordPress everywhere.
We have seen how other people do it and it is now time for us to do it even in our own country and continent. We have set balls rolling and pots cooking. The Baganda say “Travel to see, return to tell the Tale Work.” We are now the people demanded of the fruits of the scholarship that was accorded.
To Anyone Watching From the Sidelines
Let me tell you something clearly: your time is coming.
You might feel like you’re doing small things, contributing here and there, attending events, helping one person at a time. It might even feel unnoticed.
But consistency has a way of speaking loudly when the time is right.
One day, you will open an email.
One day, your name will be called.
One day, you will be the one writing something like this.
And when that day comes, I hope you will also say:
“I am indebted”.
To everyone who has been part of my journey: mentors, friends, community members and everyone, thank you. Truly.
And to the WordPress community: thank you for being a place where someone from Uganda can dare to dream globally… and actually get there.
Now let me go and start checking passport expiry dates properly, because you never know i may now get a chance to Shake Matt’s hand
Moses Cursor Ssebunya
Grateful. Growing. Going.












Ebbanja: Ekirooto kya Uganda ekyagenda e Buyindi
Wabaawo ekiseera mu bulamu lw’otuula wansi, n’omagamaga n’omala ganyeenya mutwe nga tokikkiriza. Ebiseera wewebuliza, “Naye ddala ono nze?”
Kino kyekimu ku biseera ebyo.
Ebbanja oba okubanjibwa olumu kikwanagananyizibwa ku nsimbi oba ssente, ebbanja ery’okusasula. Naye ate waliwo ekika kye bbanja ekirala, okugenza nga kyempulira kakano: Okuwulira okusiima okusukkiridde oba okuwuulira nga kikukakatako olw’okuganyulwa oba obuyambi oba okusasirwa okunji kw’oba ofunye. Bwenti bwembulira olwaleero ku kibiina eky’ensi yonna ekya bakozesa WordPress (Global WordPress Community). Eno si alipoota ya mbalirira, wabula kusiima era nga nzikiriza awatali kubuusabuusa nti obulamu bwange, omwoyo ogw’obumu era ne ddembe okutuuka mu buli ggwanga byagulibwa, ssi na nsimbi naye na kusasira.
Mpandiise emboozi eno eri bannange abaloota ewaka ewaffe mu Uganda. Eri ggwe akyeezuula, atamanyi “Plugin” kyekitegeeza. Eri omuwandiisi wa code asomera ku butambi mu matumbi budde. Eri ggwe wenna akkiriza nti entimbe z’ensi yonna “z’abalala”. Si kituufu. Luno lwe lugero lwaffe era nga lusimbuddwa munda mu kinyusi kya WordPress. Okuva mu kubuusa buusa nga Tomasi paka ku bukelembeze obukulu mu WordPress Community.
Okumala ebbanga eddeme, enkolagana yange ne WordPress yali ya byanfuna. Nga ekikozesebwa okuzimba ‘ebibanja ku mitimbagano’ – websites, engeri y’okukola ku kasente okwebeezaawo. Ebya ekibiina kya bakozesa nga nyongereza era nga sibifaako, okugeza nga okuddukirayo nga nsanze obuzibu, nga emboozi za “jjako ozeeko”. Naye olw’ensonga eno abantu banji bazze n’ebiboozi bya wattuuyo nga WordPress bwe yaffa era naziikibwa era nga ebiboozi byonna, nga sibituufu.
WordPress teri ku kuzimba bibanja; bantu. Abantu abaddala ababeerawo, abagabana, abalagirira era abaggulawo enziji zotamanyi nako nti weeziri.
Era nga bwenyinyonyodde jebuvuddeko, sinze eyali akkiriza nyo. Nalina okubuusabuusa kwange are nga neekengera nnyo. Natandika okukozesa WordPress kubanga mukwano wange yampita okujja ngezese ndabe nga ebintu bwebiri, tewali kyannyo. Bwenatandika okukozesa WordPress, obulamu nebutandika okukyuukan kati laba ntuuse ne ku ddaala eddala. WordPress esigala ensika nga enyingiza munda.
Software, Abantu (Ekibiina), famire (mu Uganda tujiyita famire kubanga tulina engeri jetwelabiriramu, okudduukirira nga waliwo afunye ekyetaago, n’enkolagana). Kati olwo nga nakamala okugenda mu nsisinkano (Meetups) n’enkungaana (WordCamps) nga ziizo, mukwano gwange yansaba njogere mu WordCamp jeyali akulembeddemu abategesi ate awo obulamu bwange ne bukyuuka neera.
Kyaali kirungi nnyo bwenatandika okwenyigira mu bibiina. Natandika okwogera mu Meetups ne WordCamps wano kubutaka ne’bulaya naye nga sirowoozangako nti nyinza okuba kubategesi ba WordCamp ya Ssemazinga.
WordPress yakyuusa engeri jendabamu abantu n’engeri jeneenyigiramu yakyuuka. Nasisinkana abasiimira ddala ne bwekaba katono.
Olugendo lw’okuva mu kubuusa bussa mpaka kuku lungamya abategesi ba WordCamps kali kabuguumirize akanjolesa amaanyi ga community eno. Amaanyi amatono, meetups, okutendeka n’obuntu obulala lala bwakola nga amakulu. Community ya WordPress yantuusa wala, okutuusa okujaguza olugendo lwe nnaliko. Ekirooto ekyatuuka e Mumbai.
Ekirooto kyokutegeka WordCamp ya ssemazinga kyali mu kko naye nga era kyewala nga kirinaanye obutasoboka. Bwennalaba okuyita okwewandiisa kwa’baagala okutegeka WordCamp eno, nendaba akakisa okuteekesa mu nkola byonna bye nnali nkola mu community.
Nakimanya nti tekijja kuba kyangu era nti omusalaba gujakuba munene naye nga nange ndimumalirivu. Namalirira okugwetikka omusalaba guno. Ate era nnali sikiwa nga bayinza okunzikiriza kubanga abalala baali banganye. Nnali mwetegefu ku buli kyebanangamba, okunzikiriza oba okungaana naye ate era nnali mwetegefu okuteekamu amaanyi gange gonna.
Okusoomoza ne kujjirawo nga kulimu okutambula. WordCamp bali bajiyita WordCamp Asia 2026, yali yakubeera Mumbai mu buyindi. Ekirowoozo kya paasipooti yange okukubwaamu stamp ya India kwali nga kuloota. Era nasaba nga ngumidde ku kimu, “Njakukolera ku mukutu (mutimbagano)”.
Kati mu yintavyu yabategesi, omusoyisoyi yeetololeranga ku kibuuzo kyekimu: “Onaasobola okujja e Mumbai?”
Amazima gennyini nga nkimanyi ssisobola. Era nawozanga kimu emiwendo j’olugendo minji sijja kujisobola naye nja kukola buli kyenninna okukola ku yintaneti. Obudde n’amaanyi nali neetegese okubiwaayo naye ensimbi ezintwala ebulaya nga mpitirivu obunji.Ekizibu kyokutambula nga kinnemye okusalira amagezi naye ate nga njagala nnyo okubeera ku tiimu.
Mu zimu ku meeting zetwabeeranga mu nga abategesi, naweebwa akayunzi (link) k’okusaba sikaala jebayita Open Horizons Scholarship okuva mu Automattic.
Bwenasoma omulamwa gwabwe, mwanattu amagezi negajja. Nga omulamwa gugamba nti, Egenderera okw’ongera obusobozi bwabantu abajja mu mikolo ja wordPress nga ewaayo obuyambi bwe’simbi eri ba contributor (ffe) abava mu bitundu ebitakiikiriddwa bulunji, ebitalabibwa, oba ebirina obutasobola obutali bumu. Kino kyawandikirwa ku lwange, ku lwaffe.
Ne suubi lyonna n’Okukiriza, najjuzaamu ekiwandiiko n’eninda. Nga nsaba nti bana nnonda, nga nsaba nti kino ekirooto ekipya kinaafuuka ekyaddala. Olugero lwaakyuukira wano, obusobozi bw’okutambula bwali buzze.
Nga wayiseewo akaseera mpaawo kaaga, nafuna email ekakasa nti nnali nnondedwa. Nabuli kati, kikyawulikika nga email eyo j’osoma emirundi n’emirundi okukakasa nti sibufere. Omanyi ezo email joosoma nga etandika ne “Tukuyozaayoza” n’okebera ajisindise emirundi nga essatu nga omutima tegunkkiriza; essanyu
Nawuniikirira, Nakyamuka, Neebaza Katonda
Okusasulirwa kuno tekwali bubeezi ku kulinnya nyonyi kugenda Mumbai; kwali kulabikirwa kwokusumula emikisa j’okufuluma eggwanga. Kyalai kijjukizo nti mu kifo ekimu, waliwo eyalaba omugaso mu kyenkola.
Obulamu bwange bwaakyuuka, engeri jentambula yakyuuka, n’enjogera yakyuuka, engeri jendabamu ebintu yakyuuka, buli kimu kyaakyuuka. Sikaala yanfula wansi yonna. Sikyaali mutegesi wa mikolo jawaka, kati ndi mutegesi wa mutindo gwa Nsi yonna.
Okugenda ku WordCamp ennene kyali kirowoozo ky assanyu nyo jendi naye jendi, kyatandika n’akatabo akaliina essuubi linji okusinga stamp zamawanga.
Awo ne tugenda mu ntalo za Visa ya Buyindi.
Amazima ga Katonda, Visa teyali nyangu, naakamu nakeddagala. Nagaanibwa; sigumu, si ebiri, si essatu. Buli mulundi nga banziramu negonjebwa n’obubaka obugamba nti “Si kumulundi Guno”
Buli mulundi gwandeetera okwebusa buusa:
Kirabika sibyange,oba nsigale ewaka.
Naye waliwo ekyasinga okunkyamula wakati mu kugaanibwa. Buli lwenagezaako, nga njiga, mbuuza ebibuuzo n’okwongera okutegeera buli kimu bwekikola… Natandika okuyamba aballa.
Emikwano jatandika okumbuuza:
“Bro, wakola otya?”
“Wakozesa biwandiiko ki?”
“Baagala ki kyenyini?”
Naye nga nze, gwe bamma visa nze mpa abalala amagezi agafuna. Nensoma mu kusaba kwabwe, nengabana ebyookuyiga. Ne mbawa ebyebuziba ba agent ne website bye zitaabawa.
Nkweewunyise? Munnange bonna ne bafuna, mu budde, nga mwemuli n’eyamukyaala wnage.
Naye nga nze kagezi munnyu wabwe, nkyaabonabona okufuna eyange.
Obulamu busesa, buli gwenagambako nga aseka
Naye ku mulundi ogwokuna… neyitamu.
Akamesegi kajja nga kanjawulo. Tekankyamula bukyamuzi kyokka. Kanzikakanya. Kali kaama akantegeeza nti “Tewali mulalu okulemerako”
Okusimbula
Okwetegekera okusimbula kwali nga kwetegekera kibuuzo kyotasomeredde bulunji.
Okusiba engugu nakyo kyali kirala. Bwopanga, bwopangulula, jjamu bino, bizzemu notandika nokwebuuza oba engoye ezo zonna ozeetaaga (Amazima gali nti tomanya kinaabawo)
Awo ne tudda ku kisaawe
Bannange ekisaawe sikya banafu ba mitima. Okutambula, okukebera. Bano ba ate “dda ebbali..” Okutambula nga wegumya kumbe otya okuseerera.
Naye akaseera akaddala?
Okutuula mu nyonyi.
Omusipi nga ngutaddeko, omutima nga gukuba, ebirowoozo nga bitambula.
Awo yinjini newuluguma… enyonyi neetandika okutambula
Mpola mpola, kasoobo nga emisinde bwejeyongera mu kaseera mpawo nkaaga nga twesozze obwengula.
Nentunulako wabweeru we dddirisa nendaba nga Uganda egenda efunda.
Mukaseera ako wenzuuliira:
Omuziziko gugudde.
Ekyaali kiwulikika nga ekizibu nga kati kigenda mu maaso mu buliwo. Tewakyali kufuumitiriza. Tekyali bya luliba lumu, lwali lutuuse: Abange sosolya bwatafa, Nali ku lyengede nga nsolobeza.
Okuwulira nga Olabiddwa
Okulabibwa tekuwaawaala. Era tekubeera ku bantu kukubira mungalo buli kiseera.
Olumu kuba kwa kimpowooze.
Mukisa gw’oba oweereddwa.
Mu nziji ezeggula nga tozikase.
OKuzuula nti amanyi go, okwewaayo, n’okubeerawo kwo bya mugaso.
Jendi, okulabika kulinga olugendo luno.
Okuva mu kubonabonera visa… paka ku kujifuna
Okuva mu kuyamba abalala okuyitamu… mpaka ku kutuuka ku buwanguzi bwange
Okuva mu kwebuuza naye nange mbajjaamu…mpaka ku kwanirizibwa ku miwaatwa eminene
Tekyaali kya mbgirawo, kya zimbibwa mpola mpola mu mitendera okumala akabanga
Era kati, nga bwenyingira mu kunyumirwa, mbyettisse byonna wamu nange: okugaanibwa, ebyokuyiga, okuwangula okutono, abantu bennayamba mulugendo lwange.
Kubanga mu nkomerero, tekiri bubeezi ku kutambula
Kiri ku kukula
Kiri ku kulemerako
Kijjukizo nti ebiseera ebimu… okukerewa si kugaanibwa
Kuba kweetegeka
Era akaseera ko bwekanajja, ojja kumanya nti kino kyli kikusinga obunene.
Munnange siikulwiseeyo nga tuli Mumbai, twaatuuka kumakya (saawa kkumi ez’omumattuluttulu ~ 4am). Munnange awo ne balyooka batwaaniriza nga bwetutaasuubira, okwagwala okuta nnyonnyoleka. Okuvira ku mugoba we mmotoka eya tutwaala ku wooteri jetwali tulins okusula mpaka ddala wansi ku wa masanda (tuku-tuku). Bannange nga buli omu wakisa. Nga ku mbaga bwekutabula musiiwuufu, omusana gwo tegwali gwa kisa era gwasiibanga mu pereketya naye nga n’omuyindi A/C ajiwadde emirimu. Mumbai yali mbalagavu.
Ate bwekyaatuuka ku bannaffe mu community ya WordPress ne gujabagira, batwaniriza n’essanyu lya mwoki wa gonja. Abantu nga bankeberako, okukakasa nti natuuse bulunji, oba nga nina kye neetaaga, oba nali nteredde ntende. Nalaba abantu banji, abamu ku bbo nga twaali twakoma kunyumya ku mikutu jino ji mukwanira wala ne mesegi za slack pepo ne WhatsApp. Kakano nga tetukyeetaaga kubeera ku ssimu wabula maaso ku maaso era nga mboota buliro. Waliwo abampola ssente kubanga kaadi yange eya banka yali eremye, nga tebatidde nti oba nadduka. Kino kyebayita obwesige, okuwaniriragana nga. Gano ge maanyi WordPress geyampa: emikwano ejiringa abooluganda ebusukka mayanja.
Ebbanja olwabaatandika
Akaseera kano akeddembe tekakolebwa mu muwulenge. Emikisa nga Open horizons Scholarship jizimbibwa ku migongo j’abantu abaawaayo nga sinnaba na kumanya WordPress kye ki.
Bano be bantu abawaayo obuwandiike
Abaaterezza ensobi ku munnana ogwekiro
Abategeka WordCamps nga abakise baba kumpi banju yo
Kati ffe abafunyeemu, tweyagalira ku bibala eby’omuti gwetutaasimba. Naye kaakano tuyitiddwa okugufukiirira, Okutegera kino kyongera okuzikkakkanya
Ebbanja… Ery’obuvunanyizibwa
Okusiima tekiri bubeezi ku kugamba “Weebale”. Kijja n’obuvunanyizibwa. Sikaala eno yankyuusa. Natandika okufaayo enyo, nga mmanyi nti bandaba era obikolwa byange; buli katono ke nnayisaamu amaaso bakalaba.
Obuvunaanyizibwa bwange butegeeza ebintu bino bina (4):
- Okweweerayo ddala: Okubeera mu bujjuvu mu kifo kyange nga omutegesi oba ayongerako.
- Okugenderera okuyiga: Okufuna obukugu n’obukenkufu okuva mu community ya WordPress
- Okukwatagana mu mazima: Okuzimba enkolagana ezaddala okuyunga zi ssemazinga
- Okukomyaawo amagezi gano ewaka: Nina okukakasa nti banna Uganda baganyulwaamu.
Kuno si kuwangula kwange, Kw community ya Uganda nga ekitole. Byennayiga ebulaya mulanga gwa kuyigiriza balala n’okwongerayo WordPress mpaka ku nsonda z’ensi. Kisinziirira ddala ku njagala joyagalamu. Tutuuse oeddoboozi lya WordPress buli wamu.
Tulabye engeri abalala bwebakola era kaseera naffe tukole u nsi yaffe ne ssemazinga.Tutandise ebintu kamaala. Ffe a Baganda tugamba; okutambula kulaba okudda kunyumya kukola. Kati ate ye ffe bantu bebabanja ebibala bya sikaala
Eri yenna alabira ku bbali
Kankutegeeze kino buterevu; akaseera ko kajja
Oyinza okuba nga owulira okozeeko bitono. Nga wnyigiramu wano na wali, genda ku mikolo, yambako omuntu omu omu. Oyinza n’okuwulira nga atalabika.
Naye okulemerako kulina engeri jekuwoggana nga akaseera katuuse
Lunaku Lumu, ojja kuggulawo email
Lunaku lumu; erinnya lyo bajja kuliyita
Lunkau Lumu, ojja kuba ggwe awandiika emboozi nga eno
Era olunaku olwo bwelunajja, kansabe nti naawe onoogamba nti:
“Mpoleddwa Ebbanja”
Eri buli abadde ekitundu ku lugendo lwange: abawabuzi, emikwano, aba community na buli omu. Weebake nnyo. Amazima
Ne WordPress community: nwebale nnyo okubeera ekifo nga omuntu mu Uganda asobola okulotera ku mutendera ogusemba… era nentuuka na yo
Kati kanzireyo nkebere paasipooti egwaako ddi kubanga munnange tomanya nyinza okufina omukisa okusikako Ma.tt mu mukono
Moses Cursor Ssebunya
Nsiima. Nkula. Ngenda.
The post Indebted: The Ugandan WordPress Dream that Flew to Asia – Ebbanja: Ekirooto kya Uganda ekyagenda e Buyindi appeared first on HeroPress.





