The novel takes after the life of a Nigerian man, Okonkwo. Okonkwo lives in a group of nine villages. The villages are managed by an insight of senior citizens. Okonkwo is one of the regarded pioneers of his town. He is also a wrestling champion. Both his wrestling and his initiative part are driven by his disgrace about his dad, who left a considerable measure of obligations unpaid when he passed on, and who Okonkwo saw as excessively ladylike. At the point when a man from a neighboring town slaughters one of the ladies from Okonkwo's village, a peace settlement requires the child also known as Ikemefuna, the son of the man who executed the lady to come live in Okonkwo's village. Okonkwo himself takes the kid in his household and start …show more content…
One of the village elders, Ezeudu, cautions Okonkwo not to asscociate with murdering the kid. Decided not to appear like a coward and weakling, particularly because of his dad's legacy, Okonkwo murders the kid himself with a blade. The kid's death is like a terrible omen. After the kid passes on, Okonkwo incidentally kills Ezeudu's child. For his wrongdoing, the village decides that Okonkwo must put in seven years in a state of banishment to appease the gods. During his exile, white missionaries land in the village. When Okonkwo at last returns, the white men have throughly penetrated his village. Okonkwo assisted some of the villagers to destroy Christian church, just to be captured by the white government. Some of the villagers, including Okonkwo, wanted to organize an uprising against the village. He even executes one of the white men. After he does , he understands that the other villages have changed excessively. They won't help him battle the white men off. Not able to live with his disclosure, Okonkwo commits suicide. This is an important part in the novel, because according to Okonkwo's traditional beliefs committing suicide is considered to one of the greatest sin. Okonkwo's desperation about his changing village is stunning in the event that it can exceed his strict adherence to the traditional
Okonkwo soon learns about this and confronts his son, Nwoye about his secret meetings, Okonkwo soon becomes enraged and disowns his son after hearing about his experience not before abusing him of course. This action causes an effect which ultimately leads to Okonkwo’s downfall. Okonkwo enraged by the spread of Christianity within his own village self-proclaims war on the “white man”. Okonkwo eventually was detained as a result of his actions towards the “white man”. After he was released from detainment Okonkwo killed a courier and began to truly understand he was a rebel without a cause as his fellow Tribesmen would not help him with his internal struggle. Okonkwo knowing, he would be caught and executed for his crimes, instead decided to ultimately end his own life by hanging himself. Okonkwo’s major downfall in the story was his inability to co-exist with the white man and began his own personal vendetta against the Christian missionaries. Throughout the story the main essential theme Achebe tried to relay to us would be the fact that even though individuals may be of different religions, skin color, and have different personalities there is a realization that
Okonkwo becomes furious, kills a messenger, and then commits suicide in order to avoid being captured by the white men. Okonkwo cannot accept the evangelists, as they have made him lose his power and control over the community and his son. The change in Okonkwo’s life is negative as it makes Okonkwo desperately look for solutions, although there are none. His internal struggle with change leads him to kill another human and himself out of inability to do
Following Okonkwo’s seven year exile, the village Okonkwo once knew has changed due to the influence of Christianity and the influence of the British missionaries and officers. Okonkwo’s initial reaction is to arm the clan against the Colonisers and drive the British people out of Igbo.
In these seven years, he hears of the destruction of the village of Abame by the white men because the natives there had killed a white man. This part also introduces the missionaries into the lives of the people with particular reference to their interest of converting people into their religion. Finally, there is the farewell feast that Okonkwo arranges for the whole village before he returns to his own village after his seven years of exile.
His tragic downfall truly begins when his is sent away because of an accidental murder of a boy. Okonkwo and his family are exiled from the tribe for seven years and Okonkwo is stripped of the fruits of his hard work. While he is away the white missionaries move into the village. They preach against the culture and its violent ways, causing Okonkwo to become saturated with rage. Seven years later, Okonkwo is able to return. He plans to reestablish himself and his position with the help of his family. However, Umofia is not as it once was. The white men have moved in and dismantled the tribe with their laws and government. Okonkwo wishes to fight, but the clan does not agree with his suggestion. After realizing the fate of the village, Okonkwo chooses to take his life. He would rather die than watch everything he had worked for fall apart because of weak people. His tragic flaw, a fear of weakness, is so strong it destroyed him.
Going back to the novel, we see Okonwo, who is extremely shocked by the twists which take place in his tribe as a cultural revolution. He sees their ancient religion giving its place to Christianity, and their father’s culture and traditions, which his life was based on, fall apart. To make things even worse, his own son turns his back to him. Okonkwo can not stand this as a result he tries to fight against the people who were the creators of this disaster. But as he fails, he commits suicide, preferring to kill himself, rather than let those strangers kill him.
For all of his desire to be strong, Okonkwo is caught up by the constant fear of being perceived as weak. He is afraid of failure and afraid of being considered weak. This fear drives him to do whatever he can to not become a failure like his father which ironically contributes to his death. While Okonkwo was a strong and important figure in his tribe, he had to keep his reputation that way by making some hard decisions. One of them was when he had to kill Ikemefuna, a young boy from the neighboring tribe. Okonkwo started accepting the decision to kill Ikemefuna because he started to call Okonkwo father. He had to keep his own valor intact and kill the boy to prevent himself from showing any weakness, but deep down, Okonkwo was really upset because of what he did which was ironic, “’When did you become a shivering old woman,' Okonkwo asked himself, 'you, who are known in all the nine villages for your valor in war? How can a man who has killed five men in battle fall to pieces because he has added a boy to their number? Okonkwo, you have become a woman indeed.'" (Achebe 65). He continued to roll downhill when the white man comes to try and convert Okonkwo’s tribe. Okonkwo responds by killing one of the messengers that were sent. This cause Okonkwo's own tribe to question his actions. “"Okonkwo stood looking at the dead man. He knew that Umuofia would not go to war. He knew because they had let the other messengers escape.
Still unable to accept and adapt to the change he encounters, Okonkwo uses a method of violence by killing the messenger from the Christians and at last kills himself. Okonkwo’s suicide marks that he finally meets his fate. He stands for his power, strength, and masculinity and has great pride for his achievement. After realizing that he cannot conquer his chi and escape from miserable events, he gives up his life by
When Okonkwo returns to the village, he finds that the white man has moved in, bringing Christianity with him. This is a struggle that shows Okonkwo’s inflexibility and objection to change from tradition. Eventually, Okonkwo slay’s a man working for the British and ends up hanging himself as a result of his actions. Suicide is forbidden by the clan,
The missionaries conflict with everything Okonkwo believes or values. The missionaries are so outlandish to Okonkwo that his first reaction is just to laugh at them. This is shown on page 147, paragraph 4, “ At the end of it Okonkwo was fully convinced that the man was mad. He shrugged his shoulders and went away.” Okonkwo later begins to understand the threat the missionaries pose to his society and passionately speaks for forcing the missionaries out of Umuofia. However when his people will not listen to him, he feels like he is forced to take matters into his own hands. This is shown on page 204, paragraph 7,” Okonkwo’s machete descended twice and the man’s head lay beside his uniformed body”. The Ibo people do not join in on the violence as Okonkwo had hoped, which contradicted with Okonkwo belief that the Ibo were warrior people. This final loss of Okonkwo’s core beliefs is what shatters Okonkwo’s final sense of identity as a man. As Okonkwo is no longer any of the things he has come to identify himself as, and Okonkwo blames the missionaries for this, his final response to the missionaries is to take his own life. Okonkwo's death is shown on page 207, paragraph 3 “ Then they came to the tree from which Okonkwo’s body was dangling, and they stopped dead.” When Okonkwo identity was ripped from him he no longer saw a point in living and his fight with the
The missionaries overall influence and power over the Igbo was too much for them to handle. This destroyed all of the non-christian things in the culture, including Okonko. Lindsay Cobb talked about this issue and stated, "Okonkwo, represents an individual deeply aligned with his society. Okonkwo's strength and presumed heroism within the novel derive from his ability to fully accept the clan's culture and follow faithfully in its traditions" (Cobb Individual and
After having a different religion and its missionaries place its temples in Okonkwo’s village, Okonkwo could not deal with the audacity the missionaries had to attempt to take over the village. His bloodthirsty attitude led him to commit and action that was unexpected and surprising, “Then they came to the tree from which Okonkwo’s body was dangling, and they stopped dead. (Achebe 206)” The author uses irony to end Okonkwo’s story to display how Okonkwo believed the situation would be solved. Okonkwo made the decision to kill himself so the tribe and the commissioners wouldn’t go into a war the tribe didn’t want, but always committed an act of cowardice in terms of the tribe’s culture.
But Okonkwo gave no response. When he returns after seven years he finds things have changed drastically. White missionaries have established themselves and some people of his village have converted to their religion. Okonkwo tries to rouse his clan to take action against these foreigners and their institutions. He was ready to stand for and fight for his community but others did not feel as strongly as Okonkwo about the new dispensation. Okonkwo’s tragic mood indicates an affirmation of the validity of the past. And movement of the plot indicates acceptance of the present as it is. “Okonkwo was deeply grieved. And it was not just a personal grief. He mourned for the clan, which he saw breaking up and falling apart and he mourned for the warlike men of Umuofia, who had so unaccountably become soft like women.” (Achebe 165). In a rage he kills one of the white men and then in order to avoid the disgrace of being caught at the hands of white men he commits suicide. There is a contrast in the way he lived his life and in the way he faces death. His death marks that unchecked manliness complex may result in a disaster. When his kinsmen find his dead body they refuse to touch it and instead asks the white men to bury him. On being asked the reason one of them explains, “It is against our custom. It is an abomination for a man to take his own life. It is an offence against the Earth,
Okonkwo is a man of high stature, he is beloved by his village has multiple wives and many children.He also believes in honor and tries his hardest to remain a noble man.However all was not perfect for Okonkwo, when he had to care for a child he grew attached to him and even considered him his son, but when the village leaders ordered this child's execution ,and when the execution was about to take place Okonkwo was so prideful of his role as a man he disobeyed the leader's orders and witnessed the execution but when the first blow was
He is victorious in wrestling, providing wealth for his family, and achieving honorary titles. We recognize his ambition, his drive to be the best- his implied excellence. In these introductory chapters, we understand the problem for the hero and his society- change is coming, but the hatred of his father and the resulting anger and fear have afflicted Okonkwo. His flaw will be his downfall in coping with the changes to come.