Chapter Twenty

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Seven years after his exile, Okonkwo realizes that the nine masked spirits’ council seat he once held and the chance to lead his clan against the new Christian religion have vanished. Determined to restore his prestige, he decides that his return will be marked by a grand display: he will rebuild his compound, construct a bigger barn, build huts for two additional wives, and initiate his five surviving sons into the prestigious ozo society, hoping to achieve the highest title.

Okonkwo’s yams have flourished both at his native homeland and in Umuofia, where a friend distributes them to share‑crop farmers. The death of his first son haunts him, but he overcomes the grief, summons his remaining five sons— the youngest only four years old—to sit in his obi, and delivers a harsh speech declaring the dead son “no longer my son or your brother” and demanding that his living children become men, threatening a curse on any who turn feminine or betray him after his death.

He laments that his daughter Ezinma is a girl, though she alone understands his moods. Ezinma, now a striking maiden nicknamed “Crystal of Beauty,” occasionally suffers brief depressive spells but remains devoted to her father. She refuses numerous marriage proposals, recalling Okonkwo’s instruction that she should marry in Umuofia upon his return, and persuades her half‑sister Obiageli to share the stance. Okonkwo wishes she were a boy, admiring her insight into his thoughts.

The narrative then shifts to Umuofia’s transformation. Christianity has taken root; Ogbuefi Ugonna, a respected man with two titles, renounces his titles and becomes a Christian, being among the first to receive Holy Communion, which he treats as a more sacred feast, storing his drinking‑horn in a goatskin bag. Simultaneously, white missionaries have introduced a colonial government: a District Commissioner presides over a court, and couriers from Umuru—called kotma or “Ashy‑Buttocks” for their ash‑colored shorts—bring accused men to trial, guard the prison, and force prisoners (including titled men) to clear the government compound and fetch wood, beating them when they resist. Prisoners sing a protest song denouncing the kotma as fit to be slaves.

Obierika recounts these changes to Okonkwo, who asks why his people have lost the power to fight. Obierika explains that the white man destroyed the neighboring village of Abame, attributing the tragedy to the villagers’ weakness. He then describes a land dispute: after Aneto killed Oduche in a fight over land, he fled, was reported by Christians, captured by the kotma, imprisoned with his family’s leaders, and later hanged at Umuru. The colonial court also ruled that a contested parcel of land should belong to Nnama’s family, who had bribed the messengers and interpreter. Okonkwo reflects on the erosion of traditional authority, the infiltration of his own brothers into Christianity, and the disintegration of clan unity caused by the colonizers’ cunning and peaceful religious spread.