Okonkwo, famed for defeating the undefeated wrestler Amalinze, emerges as a powerful, wealthy farmer with multiple titles and barns of yams, contrasted with his lazy, indebted father Unoka. Unoka’s final encounter with neighbor Okoye reveals his perpetual debt and eventual death without title. The chapter ends with Okonkwo’s elevated status and his assignment to care for the sacrificial boy Ikemefuna.
Umuofia summons all men for a council; Ogbuefi Ezeugo announces that Mbaino killed a Umuofia woman, prompting an ultimatum for war or compensation. Okonkwo is sent as emissary to Mbaino, returns with a fifteen‑year‑old boy, Ikemefuna, and a virgin. The clan decides the virgin will marry Ogbuefi Udo, while Ikemefuna is placed under Okonkwo’s care for three years. Detailed description of Okonkwo’s compound, his strict, fear‑driven rule, his relationship with his three wives and eight children, and his anxieties about resembling his lazy father. Nwoye, Okonkwo’s twelve‑year‑old son, shows early signs of laziness, causing Okonkwo further concern.
Okonkwo’s humble origins are revealed: his father Unoka’s chronic debt, failure to inherit a barn, and death from a forbidden swelling. Okonkwo secures his first yam seed stock by performing a ritual offering to the wealthy man Nwakibie, who grants him eight hundred seed yams after a formal kola‑nut and palm‑wine ceremony. He endures an extremely poor agricultural year marked by a long drought followed by torrential rains that wash away the yam heaps, yet survives through relentless toil and prayer. The chapter ends with Okonkwo recalling his father’s dying counsel about never despairing, reinforcing his personal resolve.
Okonkwo insults a fellow at a kindred meeting and later apologises; Ikemefuna becomes ill, recovers, and forms a close bond with Nwoye; Okonkwo beats his wife Ojiugo during the Week of Peace and is chastised by priest Ezeani, who demands a sacrificial offering; elders recall ancient severe penalties for breaking the peace; Okonkwo prepares seed‑yams, harshly disciplines Nwoye and Ikemefuna, and oversees the planting season.
Chapter Five introduces the annual New Yam Festival in Umuofia. Okonkwo hosts the feast, reluctantly participates, beats his second wife Ekwefi for a minor offense, then nearly shoots her with a rusted gun. The festival’s rituals are described, including yam offerings, palm‑wine, and a large wrestling match that captivates Ekwefi. Ekwefi and her daughter Ezinma prepare food, interact with Nwoye’s mother, and attend the wrestling festivities. Ikemefuna, now living in Okonkwo’s household, helps fetch the gun and is present during the celebrations. The chapter ends with the village’s drums beating continuously as the wrestling contest approaches.
The village hosts a large wrestling festival; Maduka, son of Obierika, wins the preliminary bout; Ekwefi speaks with priestess Chielo during the intermission; the climax features Okafo defeating Ikezue in the final match, earning heroic acclaim.
Ikemefuna spends three years in Okonkwo’s house, becoming a brother to Nwoye and steering him toward masculine duties; the village experiences a rare locust swarm that provides abundant food; the Oracle orders Ikemefuna’s execution, Ezeudu warns Okonkwo not to partake, but Okonkwo ultimately kills Ikemefuna during the exile ceremony, and Nwoye, traumatized, becomes deeply alienated from his father.
Okonkwo mourns Ikemefuna, wrestles with weakness, visits Obierika, hears the odd death of Ogbuefi Ndulue and his wife, debates ozo customs, and participates in Akueke’s bride‑price negotiation using broom‑sticks, ending with men comparing neighboring customs and mentioning a leper called Amadi.
Okonkwo awakens to find his daughter‑in‑law Ezinma gravely ill with iba; Ekwefi’s tragic history of losing ten children to ogbanje is revealed, and the medicine man Okagbue Uyanwa locates and extracts Ezinma’s iyi‑uwa, breaking the ogbanje cycle and restoring her health, though she later falls ill again, prompting Okonkwo to prepare a potent medicinal brew.
The clan’s egwugwu council convenes to hear a bride‑price and domestic‑violence dispute between Uzowulu (Mgbafo’s husband) and Mgbafo’s brothers; the egwugwu leader Evil Forest rules that Uzowulu must bring wine to his in‑laws and reconcile, while Odukwe must allow his sister to return with him. The decision is followed by a brief discussion among elders and the start of a separate land‑case.
Ekwefi tells Ezinma a folk tale about Tortoise; later the priestess Chielo, Oracle of Agbala, summons Ezinma to the shrine; Ekwefi pursues Chielo through night‑long, fear‑filled terrain toward the hills and caves; Okonkwo tries to intervene, eventually confronts Ekwefi as dawn approaches.
Obierika’s daughter’s uri (wedding) ceremony unfolds with village-wide preparations, a massive feast, exchange of bride‑price, and Okonkwo’s participation in the rituals, including the presentation of snuff and two cocks to the guests.
Okonkwo learns of the death of the elder Ezeudu; the clan holds a massive, violent funeral with cannons, drums, and many egwugwu spirits. During the celebrations a mis‑fired gun owned by Okonkwo kills Ezeudu’s sixteen‑year‑old son, making Okonkwo responsible for the inadvertent killing of a clansman. As a result Okonkwo is condemned to female‑type crime and must flee for seven years. That night his compound is razed, his yams burned, and his property destroyed by members of Ezeudu’s quarter acting as the earth goddess’s messengers, though they bear no personal hatred. Obierika helps Okonkwo pack his belongings, carries yams to his barn, and later reflects on the harshness of the goddess’s justice and on his own past actions concerning his discarded twin children.