In 2005, John Tucker Mugabi Sentamu was installed as the Anglican Church’s Archbishop of York. Sentamu was born on June 10, 1949, the sixth of 13 children of Rev. John and Ruth Walakira in a village outside Kampala, Uganda. Taught by British missionaries and expatriates who encouraged his intellectual development and ambitions, in 1971 he earned his law degree at Makerere University in Kampala. His practice of law in Uganda ceased when he was jailed and nearly beaten to death for having opposed President Idi Amin’s dictatorship. He fled to England in 1974 and began studying theology at Cambridge University where, after being ordained an Anglican priest in 1979, he was awarded the doctorate in theology in 1984.
Having served as assistant chaplain at Selwyn College at Cambridge University and several stints as an Anglican parish priest, in 1996 Sentamu, a popular figure known for his “lively sermons” and allowing “music and dancing in the aisles,” was elevated to Bishop of Stepney in the Diocese of London.
In 1997, partly because of his brief experience as a judge in Uganda and because of his respected position of Bishop of Stepney, Sentamu was asked and agreed to serve as an advisor to a judicial inquiry into the racially motivated killing of black college student Stephen Lawrence which had occurred three years prior. His role in the investigation prompted threatening hate mail. In 2002, he again received national attention for his role in chairing the investigation of another controversial murder, that of 10-year-old Nigerian immigrant Damilola Taylor. Sentamu himself became the victim of a brutal racist assault which sent him to the hospital. Also during the period of the investigation in 2002 he was named Bishop of Birmingham, and within a few years was selected President of Youth for Christ and named President of YMCA England.
Since becoming the 97th Archbishop of York in 2005--which includes a seat in the House of Lords and admission to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom--Sentamu has been