Judith Babirye, “I am deeply sorry for the hearts I damaged during my second marriage.”
Judith Babirye, a senior pastor, former Member of Parliament, and gospel singer, has come out begging for forgiveness from the nation.
Judith Babirye, a senior pastor, former Member of Parliament, and gospel singer, has come out begging for forgiveness from the nation. She spoke on about her marriage, pleading for forgiveness from those who had been injured and wounded.
The singer cast a forlorn look, an ashamed position, and vomited out words appealing for pity, forgiveness, and pardon from everyone in a viral video, head down, voice toned down, with Omusayi gwa yesu (one of her songs) abundantly playing in the background.
Her new skin hue yawningly different from her original, she looked far from the fat self she had been when representing Buikwe District in Parliament, the background musical theme possibly the sole reminder of her prior poetic inspirations both to the secular and religious crowds.
Judith Babirye went on and on about her sins, rubbing in her shame and pointing out her errors.
“I come to you, my brother, and I come to you, my sister, and I beg you to pardon me.” “I regret and apologize to the many people I have wounded as a result of my error,” she lamented.
“Please forgive me for my error,” she concluded, pleading with believers, pastors, and the entire country to forgive her.
“I want to apologize to Ms. Lukia Ntale; please forgive me; I don’t know how else to express my sorrow; I am so sorry; what I did was wrong; please forgive me.”
Lukia Ntale is the wife of Paul Musoke Ssebulime, a former Buikwe North Member of Parliament with whom Judith Babirye secretly married before the marriage fell apart only two years later.
How Babirye’s situation deteriorated
In 2018, Judith Babirye married Paul Musoke Ssebulime, a fellow politician, in a traditional ceremony at a hotel in Entebbe.
The wedding, which was full of grandeur, pomp, and merriment, was quiet, and it was revealing that it took place on a neutral ground in Entebbe, away from the prying eyes of paparazzi and the suspicious gazes of people who knew the couple.
The conventional wedding, as certain as day follows night, began with a church ceremony in which the couple sealed their vows and became husband and wife.
Unfortunately, the marriage began to unravel as soon as the DJ packed his musical instruments.
Lukia Ntale, Ssebulime’s wife, stepped out and fought the marriage vehemently, claiming her rightful place as the mother of Ssebulime’s children.
She went on to seek a meeting with Judith Babirye’s parents, to whom she wished to deliver a message for Judith Babirye to leave the marriage.
Ntale claimed she had been lawfully married to Ssebulime for ten years and that Judith Babirye had approached her husband as a friend only to end up in a wedding gown.
Judith Babirye’s time in Uganda came to an end at that point. Ssebulime and Ntale kissed and made up in her absence. They also performed a traditional wedding ceremony in Buikwe, albeit with extreme caution.
However, in the latter months of 2018, Ssebulime petitioned the high court family court to dissolve his marriage to Judith Babirye, claiming that he had not seen her since December 22, 2018 and that she had tortured him psychologically, among other things.
Musoke reportedly accused Babirye of denying him sex, claiming that their last sexual encounter was in August of last year.
Lady Justice Olive Kazaarwe Mukwaya of the High Court’s family division decided that Babirye had not proved any wrongdoing in Musoke’s petition.