Okonkwo's Death

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A man cannot carry a nation on hi back because eventually he will break his back and fall. In Things Fall Apart, written by Chinua Achebe, contemplates about the life of a primitive tribe of the lower Niger. The novel discusses the rise and fall of a great man named Okonkwo who is considered to be the leader of the Igbo tribe. Later on in the novel, missionaries move into the area and threaten to overrun the Igbo way of life and instill Christianity into the minds of the Igbo people. The missionaries convinced his son to join and little by the little the Igbo culture began to die as “whites” began to take over. Everything Okonkwo knew was going away and he could not stand it anymore, so he decided to take his life instead. The clansmen arrange his death by having …show more content…

Meanwhile he was alive, the missionaries could not try to fully “civilize” the Umuofia, as Okonkwo was an obstacle in their path. He was not willing to give up on everything he knew just because someone else told him to. Okonkwo was going to go by his and the long standing beliefs that the Igbo people have stood by for hundreds of years. Okonkwo’s death tells the reader that eventually the Igbo culture will die out in light of Christianity. Looking at Okonkwo’s body, Obierika loses his composure and blurts out, “That man was one of the greatest men in Umuofia. You drove him to kill himself; and now he will be buried like a dog…” at the District Commissioner. It should not be so that a man of such strength and manhood should kill himself just because he cannot take all of the changes surrounding him. This tells the reader that there is no longer a want to be a part of the Igbo culture as so many were converting over to Christianity but not Okonkwo. He’d rather kill himself than to convert over to Christianity. This shows how much he cared about the Igbo culture and how much he was disgusted he was by everything that was going

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