Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter 231,475 wordsCompleted

Okonkwo feels a rare happiness after the destruction of the missionary church because his clan seems to be listening to him again. All the men of Umuofia arm themselves with guns or machetes, wary of another surprise like the massacre at Abame.

The District Commissioner returns from a tour; Mr. Smith meets him for a long discussion, while the Umuofia men pay no attention. Three days later the Commissioner sends his persuasive messenger, “James,” to summon the six chief men of Umuofia, including Okonkwo, to his headquarters. The six obey, each carrying a sheathed machete but no gun, and go to the colonial courthouse.

In the courthouse the Commissioner greets them politely and invites them to tell their side of the church‑destruction incident. Ogbuefi Ekwueme begins recounting how the missionary’s son, Enoch, murdered an egwugwu. The Commissioner interrupts, orders his interpreter to bring twelve of his men into the room, and then handcuffs the six chiefs, sending them to a guardroom.

There, the Commissioner offers a conditional “peace”: the chiefs will be released only if they agree to pay a fine of two hundred bags of cowries for burning the church and “molesting” the people. He threatens further punishment otherwise. The chiefs remain silent and are left alone.

The prison messengers, led by the prisoners’ barber, shave the chiefs’ heads, deny them food, water, and bathroom breaks, and repeatedly mock them, knocking their shaven heads together. After three days of hunger, humiliation, and taunts, the chiefs begin to consider submission. Okonkwo angrily declares they should have killed the white man; another prisoner remarks they could now be taken to “Umuru” to be hanged.

When the District Commissioner departs, the messengers spread the story throughout Umuofia, exaggerating that the six leaders will be taken to Umuru and possibly hanged, that families might also be executed, and that soldiers could come to destroy the village. The village falls silent; later the village crier walks the whole settlement, beating his ogene, and calls every man above the Akakanma age group to a meeting in the market after the morning meal.

At the market the men decide to raise two hundred and fifty bags of cowries immediately to satisfy the white man’s demand, unaware that fifty of those bags have been secretly added by the messengers to increase the fine. This collective decision marks the village’s first organized effort to meet the colonial penalty following the church’s destruction.