Mark Makumbi : Sobbing friends, workmates
and relatives remembered him as funny, friendly, comic and motor-mouthed.
That
was Mark Augustine Makumbi, a radio presenter at Central Broadcasting Services
(CBS) FM for the last five years, who passed on last Friday at Mulago hospital
after succumbing to cancer.
With
his remarkable voice, Makumbi touched many people through his comic sports
commentary and presentation on radio and special (Kadongokamu) musical lyrics
on stage performances during concerts.
Different
eulogies from mourners highlighted the fact that Makumbi, who was 38, died
at his would-be most productive stage of life. Makumbi was a jack of all
trades, but he largely stood out as a sports presenter.
Starting
back at Christian radio, Sapientia FM back in 2003, he captured the imagination
of many listeners for his authoritative knowledge of football. It was a result
of his sports insight that CBS FM hired him.
RARE
BREED
For the
manager of programming at CBS FM, Abbey Mukiibi, Makumbi was every positive
word one would think of.
“He was
a rare breed. Very smart – both in the head and in appearance – creative,
innovative, down to earth, cooperative…he was everything good,” Mukiibi said on
Saturday.
But
Mukiibi will most especially miss the workaholic and ambitious employee that
was Makumbi. He says that Makumbi would fill in for anyone at work and would do
a thorough job.
“You
would just tell him so and so is not around; and he would say let me do it. And
he was thorough. He was a guy who would discuss a sporting disciplines,
kadongokamu and politics with ease. People like him are hard to find,” Mukiibi
said of Makumbi, who was known as soldier by his workmates for his willingness
to be deployed anywhere.
Even
when he was diagnosed with cancer five years ago, Mukiibi says Makumbi
continued with his work and believed he would make it, until July last year
when the situation worsened.
“The
doctors had told us that he would live for two months but it was a miracle that
he lived for five more,” Mukiibi said.
“But all we can do is to celebrate his life and character. He can be a good
example to young men.
At CBS,
Makumbi, described as a hard working individual by workmates and friends, rose
through the ranks to become head of the station’s sport desk. He held the post
until his death.
He
commanded a huge following on air because of his unmatched live football
commentary on Europeanfootball.
MANY TALENTS
From
the age of 15, he joined the Matendo band before teaming up with the
kadongokamu star singers such as Mathias Walukagga and Fred Ssebbaale in a
music group called Vision Heroes. That uplifted his knowledge in kadongokamu
music, of which he became an avid critic.
The
passion for it also saw him do a music show every Sunday morning on CBS FM with
co-worker, Hadija Kinobe. In the afternoons, he did a separate show on Bukedde
TV, which in many ways reinvigorated this type of music at a time many felt its
popularity had subsided.
Makumbi
is popularly remembered for his songs Lovinsa and Endaga Butonde, the latter
being a theme song urging parents to carry out DNA tests on their children.
He is
survived by two children and a legacy that was just beginning to take off.
David Lumasi, his workmate at CBS FM since 2008, remembers Makumbi as versatile
and hardworking.
“He has
been a firm believer in himself as a singer, sports presenter and mechanic,”
Lumansi recollects.
Renowned
local movie and songwriter, Mariam Ndagire wrote on her Facebook page that the
entertainment industry has lost a valuable person in Makumbi.
“I have
lost a great fan. Mark Makumbi constantly reminded me of his admiration for my
work; I never took that for granted. I always adored his work on CBS; he loved
and respected what he did,” she said in her post on Friday.
Walukagga
said Makumbi was creative and open-minded person who always wanted to learn
more.
“He was
one of those kadongokamu singers who did not get deserved recognition,”
Walukagga noted.
He went
to Ssumbwe Primary School on Mityana road, Wakiso SSS, and Malcom X Academy
Katwe from where he finished Senior Four. He joined Christian High
School, Namasuba for A-Level.
He
studied journalism at UMCAT but his first job was in welding, as he searched
for formal employment. Makumbi, born in December 1978, was laid to rest on
Saturday at Ssumbwe in Bulenga.
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