Chapter Eighteen

Chapter 181,964 wordsCompleted

The young church in Mbanta faces early crises. Initially the clan doubts its survival, but the missionaries persist. Three converts publicly mock the clan’s gods and are beaten, after which relations calm. Rumors spread that white men have built a judgment place in Umuofia and hanged a missionary, but these tales do not yet affect local attitudes.

When two outcast osu attend a Sunday service, the congregation protests. Mr Kiaga intervenes, declaring that before God there is no slave or free and urging acceptance of the osu. He explains the osu’s taboo status—unmarriageable, marked by long tangled hair, prohibited from certain rites, and buried in the Evil Forest. He commands the osu to shave their hair; they obey, become fervent Christians, and most osu follow their example.

Later, an osu zealously kills the clan’s sacred python, the embodiment of the water god. The python is revered as “Our Father”; its death would normally require costly atonement, but no penalty exists for intentional killing. The elders convene to decide a response. Okonkwo, furious, argues for forceful expulsion of the Christians; other elders counsel restraint, noting that the offense lies between the offender and the god. The council ultimately votes to ostracize the Christians rather than wage war.

That night a bell‑man announces that the Christian community is excluded from all clan privileges. The Christians, now a small but confident group attended by missionary Mr Brown, continue their worship.

During Holy Week, women are sent to collect red earth, water, and chalk for Easter preparations. Upon return they report being chased away from the stream, quarry, and market by whips and threats, effectively outlawing them from village resources. The women inform Mr Kiaga, who learns from the bell‑man’s proclamation that the Christians have been banned. The male converts, armed with sticks and machetes, decide to accompany the women to confront the “cowards.” They learn that the ostracism stems from the claim that Okoli, an osu who killed the sacred python, is responsible. Okoli had denied the accusation before falling ill and dying that night, which the clan interprets as evidence that the gods still intervene. The episode ends with the clan seeing no further reason to molest the Christians, while the church remains marginalized but intact.