The #Babishai2017 poetry festival team is conducting a series of intervies of interviews towards the festival, scheduled from 4-6 August in Uganda. During that time, we will conduct several interviews with poets and writers. This interview was first published in Brittle paper.
Mugabi Byenkya, author of Dear Philomena. 
Interviewer
What were some of the pivotal moments that shaped your path to the arts?
Mugabi Byenkya
The
 year was 1994. I vividly remember running up to my siblings after 
lunch, super excited to play. To my dismay, my siblings were all curled 
up on chairs in the sitting room reading. Reading. I was like "Lets 
play!" And my siblings replied, "No we're reading." Reading. What the 
heck was this reading thing that it could more fun than playing with me?
 I thought I was the greatest thing since sliced bread and couldn't 
fathom anything being preferable to playing with me. So I went to my mom
 and asked her to teach me how to read.
Several
 months later, after slogging through numerous intense reading lessons, I
 discovered the one thing that was indeed superior to playing with me. 
Reading. After months of more intense lessons, I discovered the one 
thing that was superior to reading. Writing.
Interviewer
Is Dear Philomena an extraction of your biography?
Mugabi Byenkya
Dear Philomena is
 not an extraction of my biography in the literal sense. It is the story
 of one year of my life but it is not told conventionally. The novel 
employs magical realism to tell the story and therefore cannot be fully 
interpreted as a direct extraction of my biography.
Interviewer
What were some of your most rewarding moments when writing the book?
Mugabi Byenkya
Catharsis.
 The book was incredibly difficult to write as I share some of my most 
vulnerable moments and deepest fears. I had just been through one of the
 worst years of my life when I started writing the book. The writing 
process was a way to process all the pain I had experienced and putting 
all that pain to paper was an incredibly catharthic experience.
Interviewer
What were some of your most challenging moments when writing the book?
Mugabi Byenkya
While initially writing Dear Philomena,
 I could barely write for fifteen minutes every other day. Fifteen 
minutes of writing on alternate days would induce violent seizures and 
migraines. I often wondered if it was worth it. Now that I've built up 
my strength and endurance, now that I could write a whole book, now that
 I could share my vulnerability and story with the world, I honestly 
still don't think it was worth all it put me through. However, at least I
 got something of substance and meaning out of it that has impacted so 
many people and causing the start of so many important conversations on 
vulnerability. 
Interviewer
What are your thoughts on art for social change?
Mugabi Byenkya
I
 believe that art is part of a multifaceted approach for social change. I
 can’t speak to the relative importance of art versus other mediums for 
social change such as politics, economics, science and the 
inherent/intertwined art within these mediums. Art has always been 
political and a medium for social change; nonetheless, not all art is 
overtly political. Not all art should be analyzed through the lens of 
social change.  
Interviewer
What are some of the most encouraging comments on your book?
Mugabi Byenkya
Some
 people who have read my book have cried several times while reading it.
 The fact that my writing elicited such a visceral reaction touched me 
more than they know.
Interviewer
What have most readers misunderstood about your work?
Mugabi Byenkya
Most
 readers haven’t necessarily misunderstood but have had varying 
interpretations of the character of Philomena. This is what I had hoped 
for, as I deliberately left her to be ambiguous.
Interviewer
What are three things your book mostly wants to portray?
Mugabi Byenkya
That Vulnerability is strength. That some things can never be surmounted. That it’s okay not to be okay.
Interviewer
Is writing and completing a well-received book, everything you dreamed it would be?
Mugabi Byenkya
I’ve
 been dreaming of writing and completing a well-received book for 21 
years. Even writing down the fact that it was well-received feels 
strange because a part of me is still in a state of disbelief. The other
 part of me has ingrained Baganda modesty inherited from my mother and 
is cringing over the admission that my book has been well-received. It 
honestly still feels surreal and hasn’t fully sunk in. I don’t know if 
it ever fully will but I do know that it is an even more sensational 
feeling than I dreamed it would be.
Interviewer
Who are some of the writers whose works you admire?
Mugabi Byenkya
Isabel
 Allende; Louis Sachar; Brian Michael Bendis; Chris Claremont; Stan Lee;
 G. Willow Wilson; John Keats; Doreen Baingana; Oscar Wilde; Neil Simon;
 Bell Hooks; Nasir Jones; Fatimah Warner and Victor Byenkya.
Interviewer 
At what age should creative writing be introduced in a child?
Mugabi Byenkya
As early as humanly possible 
.
Interviewer
How can Ugandan writers become more relevant to the global market?
Mugabi Byenkya
Eish.
 That’s a tough question. I’m honestly not sure of how Ugandan writers 
can become more relevant to the global market, save by telling a good 
story in an original way and not being afraid to experiment. I feel like
 writers who carry any sort of "ethnic" label are burdened by the 
struggles and stories of their people and feel a need to represent on 
behalf of their people that a lot of Western white writers don’t feel. 
Don’t be afraid to experiment with things labeled "stereotypically 
un-African" like science fiction. Tell a good story, tell it well, 
market it well, promote it well and sell it well.
Interviewer
Should we blame our Government for the limited literary infrastructures in our country?
Mugabi Byenkya
I’m not the best person to answer this question as I have spent the majority of my life not living in Uganda.
Interviewer
If you had unlimited resources for a day, how would you use it?
Mugabi Byenkya
Pay
 off the education and medical debts my family has accrued as well as 
the debts of everyone I possibly could. This may lead to economic issues
 down the line but the burden of debt is crushing and the ability to 
provide some relief to that would be amazing.
Interviewer
If your book were a drink, what would it be?
Mugabi Byenkya
A shot of whiskey neat mixed with Tabasco sauce.
Interviewer
Any parting remarks?
Mugabi Byenkya
“Be who you want to be, not who you are.” Many thanks.


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