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The Nnabagereka of Buganda (Queen Consort), Sylvia Nagginda Luswata, has urged parents and guardians to allow children to showcase at home the skills gained from Ekisaakaate freely.
The annual traditional Buganda cultural camp targeting six to 18-year-olds is aimed at instilling moral values, discipline, leadership, and cultural heritage in young people.
At the heart of the programme are life skills, physical fitness, and cultural education.
On Wednesday (January 7), the Nnaabagereka spent hours interacting with the young participants at Hormisdallen Primary School — the host of the 2026 edition — in Wakiso district.
She said the programme can only be effective if children return home and are allowed to practice what they have learnt by helping house-helps, if any, with house chores plus other activities.
"Let children showcase, for instance, the home baking skills they have learnt from the Ekisaakaate.”

Ekisaakaate means 'enclosure', in reference to ancient royal training grounds, which now serves children — both boys and girls — from diverse backgrounds.
This year's edition has drawn as many as 250 participants from different Buganda sub-counties, who have immersed themselves in a transformative experience of cultural education blended with modern life skills for a period of nine days.
Nagginda said children can even use their newly-acquired knowledge and craft to earn some income for self-development.
Hormisdallen is hosting Ekisaakaate for the second time, having first done so in 2024, and the Queen Consort was keen to express her gratitude to the school management.
We are proud of the school. We are here, and we are using the school facilities," she said, also thanking the facilitators (ssengas and kojjas) and counsellors.