Samuel Sindamuka

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Samuel_Sindamuka an entity of type: Thing

Samuel Sindamuka (Gitara, Province of Bururi, 1928 - December 18, 2005) was the first Primate of the Anglican Church of Burundi, then called the Episcopal Church of Burundi, entitled in French Église Episcopale du Burundi. Sindamuka's parents were among the first converts to Anglicanism in his region and he was baptized in 1939. He studied to become a primary school teacher, working at first in Matana. He later became the headteacher in Matana and then Buhiga and subsequently inspector of all primary schools in the Matana area. He married Flavia Kayeye and they had seven children. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Samuel Sindamuka
rdf:langString Samuel Sindamuka
rdf:langString Samuel Sindamuka
rdf:langString Bujumbura, Burundi
rdf:langString Gitara, Burundi
xsd:integer 35627506
xsd:integer 1081599746
xsd:integer 1974
rdf:langString new title
xsd:integer 1928
xsd:integer 2005
rdf:langString Archbishop Samuel Ndayisenga
xsd:integer 1992
rdf:langString Primate of Burundi
rdf:langString Primate of the Episcopal Church of Burundi
rdf:langString Bishop
xsd:integer 1992
rdf:langString Samuel Sindamuka (Gitara, Province of Bururi, 1928 - December 18, 2005) was the first Primate of the Anglican Church of Burundi, then called the Episcopal Church of Burundi, entitled in French Église Episcopale du Burundi. Sindamuka's parents were among the first converts to Anglicanism in his region and he was baptized in 1939. He studied to become a primary school teacher, working at first in Matana. He later became the headteacher in Matana and then Buhiga and subsequently inspector of all primary schools in the Matana area. He married Flavia Kayeye and they had seven children. Later he became the legal representative for church schools of the Protestant Churches Alliance, now called National Council of Churches. He was also a member of the parliament of Burundi for four years, in the first years of the country's independence. He was ordained as an Anglican priest in 1974 and consecrated a bishop in 1975, to serve as diocesan Bishop of Bujumbura, the new second diocese in Burundi. In 1987 he became Archbishop of the Province of Burundi, Rwanda and Boga-Zaire, until it was separated into its constituent countries in 1992. He then became the first Archbishop of the newly created Province of the Episcopal Church of Burundi, from 1992 until his retirement in 1998. Meanwhile in 1990 he had become Bishop of Matana, swapping dioceses with , who became Bishop of Bjumbura. His funeral and burial took place in St. Peter's Cathedral, in Matana, the Anglican Diocesan Centre in Bururi Province. The tributes given at the time of his death demonstrated how widely his faith and integrity were respected by both Burundi nationals and expatriates and by church members and political leaders.
rdf:langString Burundi
xsd:integer 1975
rdf:langString Matana
rdf:langString Archbishop of the Province of Burundi, Rwanda and Boga-Zaire
rdf:langString Matana
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4476
rdf:langString Primate of Burundi

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