Things Fall Apart

1214 Words3 Pages

Kevin Mead
Conflict in Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
African culture is often chronically misunderstood. Beginning in the 1600s, European colonists attempted to infiltrate their ancient way of life and replace it with their own, systematically sending their District Commissioners to each populated area they had gained control of, effectively washing the region of its identity. In the book Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, he attempts to break down a wall of ignorance and misinformation that we have inadvertently gained as western students. By creating a full, rich set of flawed human characters and using them as a tool to present his themes, Achebe gives us a more humanistic account of colonization of the Upper Nigerian region in the …show more content…

Africa has an almost infinite number of recorded languages, something that the Europeans didn’t effectively prepare for. When the Ibos met the missionaries, they are stuck communicating with a sub par interpreter. Light is made of this when an Ibo jokester makes fun of the interpreter’s confusion of the words “myself” and “buttocks”: “‘Your buttocks understand my language’” (Achebe 145). However, this confusion quickly becomes serious, such as on page 176, when Okonkwo asks Obierika who a piece of land has gone to, and he reveals that the District Commissioner's court gave it to a family that had supported the whites monetarily: “(Okonkwo speaking) ‘Does the white man understand our custom about land?’ (Obierika speaking) ‘How can he when he does not speak our tongue?’” (176 Achebe). Often, this lack of respect for the Ibo’s language and culture as a whole derives from the European’s fake sense of superiority. They didn’t feel the need to learn the land’s language, or properly train their translators. And in their minds, they were the ones with the guns and an army; dealing with “small” issues like land ownership and the way that the Ibos dealt with its handling were hardly contradictory to their overall plan. As a result, critical misunderstanding and ignorance became a large part of the Ibo-European …show more content…

When one person, a group, or culture believes that basic moral codes have been broken, violence and social turmoil often ensue. This was such the case on a commentary piece written by David Wilkie, “National Parks, Rights, and the Need for Fairness”, for the Huffington Post. David Wilkie is an advocate for what he and organizations like The United Nations see to be basic human rights that everyone is entitled to. In the article, he touches on the conflicts that people in undeveloped countries countries are having with their resource-hungry governments. Countries like the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Indonesia are often the most filled with the natural resources, such as wood, oil, and precious metals, that richer countries are willing to pay top dollar for. However, conflict arises with how this wealth is distributed. “When a national government decides to allocate their lands to logging, mining or agricultural concessions, the local people living there are typically neither consulted nor compensated” (Wilkie). This is such the case in Things Fall Apart; while the Ibos may not have been betrayed by their own government, they were similarly betrayed by the white men’s. Just as the people of these 3rd world countries, they are systematically placed as 2nd class citizens, and pacified by the higher power. This is highlighted in a scene at the end of the book where Okonkwo has hanged himself out of

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