Chapter Nineteen

Chapter 191,536 wordsCompleted

The heavy rains of the year subside, signaling the end of Okokwo’s exile. While the rains cease, Obierika informs Okokwo that two huts have been erected in his former compound in Umuofia, allowing Okokwo to begin preparations for his return after the dry season. He cannot begin building his obi until the full seven‑year penalty has elapsed, so he waits impatiently for the dry spell.

Okokwo summons his three wives, ordering them to prepare a feast to thank his mother’s kinsmen before his departure. Ekwefi, who still has a small store of cassava from the previous harvest, is tasked with providing the staple; Nwoye’s mother and Ojiugo are assigned smoked fish, palm‑oil and pepper, while Okokwo himself will supply meat and yams.

Early the next morning Ekwefi, her daughter Ezinma, and Ojiugo’s daughter Obiageli go to Ekwefi’s farm to harvest cassava. They carry baskets, machetes and hoes; the soil is soft from a light night rain. They discuss the wet leaves, pull the tubers, and transport the harvest to the stream for fermentation.

Okokwo insists on a generous feast, rejecting Ekwefi’s suggestion that two goats would suffice; three goats and a number of fowls are slaughtered. The tables are laid with foo‑foo, yam pottage, egusi soup, bitter‑leaf soup, and vats of palm‑wine. All members of the umunna (the extended Okolo family) are invited.

During the feast Uncle Uchendu, the eldest living member of the lineage, receives the kola nut, breaks it, offers a prayer for health and children, and throws a lobe to the ancestors. As the food is passed around, Okokwo’s wives, children and helpers serve the dishes; the sons bring out the palm‑wine.

When the feast is fully laid out, Okokwo rises and modestly offers a small kola nut, saying it cannot repay the kindness of his mother’s people. The meal proceeds, beginning with yam pottage, followed by foo‑foo, soups, and the shared meat, each man taking his portion in order of seniority.

After the meal, an elder of the umunna thanks Okokwo, praising his generosity and lamenting the younger generation’s loss of traditional kinship values. He warns that a new “abominable religion” has taken hold, allowing men to abandon their fathers and curse ancestral gods, and expresses fear for the clan’s future. He concludes by thanking Okokwo for gathering the kinsmen.