Things Fall Apart Group
Question:
In the story Things Fall Apart, why did Okonkwo kill himself?
Answers:
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eNotes Editor
Posted by jamie-wheeler on Sunday July 22, 2007 at 7:27 AMOkonkwo kills himself because he has no choice, really. He has killed a colonial official with a machete. His own people have been divided by loyalties to the colonial regime and their own religion and culture. They could have risen up and defended Okonkwo's actions, but they do not. To avoid the punishment that is sure to come, Okonkwo takes matters into his own hands and hangs himself from a tree.
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Posted by sagetrieb on Sunday July 22, 2007 at 7:38 AM
Okonkwo commits suicide because he loses his place as a man in his culture, a place now filled by the Church and Christian values. From the beginning of the story, he worries about his manhood, seen in his rejection of his father who was womanly, having no titles, and perpetually indebted to his kinsmen. He commits murder out of frustration in defending his manhood, but his clansmen refuse to retaliate against the white man and defend his act of murder. His act of suicide is at once an act of defiance in asserting the traditional ways of his tribe but also an act of humiliation because those ways are no more: Christianity has superceded them. Ironically, his suicide can be seen as a womanly act—the act of a coward, so that Christianity has stolen from him the manhood he strived so hard to establish throughout his life.
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eNotes Editor
Posted by cmcqueeney on Sunday July 22, 2007 at 7:47 AMThroughout the whole novel, Okonkwo struggles with the changes taking place in his tribe. He is initially known as one of the strongest, most honorable tribesmen, but as the white man begins coming in and other tribal members begin to change as a result, particularly his own son, Okonkwo cannot handle the change. He sees these other clansmen as weak, like he saw his father was weak. The one thing Okonkwo fears the most is weakness. By novel's end, Okonkwo has tried to remain strong against the tide of change, but he appears to be the only one. When he kills the colonial official in the end, it is one last attempt to 'save' his tribe from the weakness and influence of the white man. No one else backs his attempt however, so Okonkwo, in desperation, chooses the most dishonorable death possible, suicide, rather than allow himself to be handed over to the 'weak' white man.
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Posted by hadjer on Sunday February 10, 2008 at 10:54 AM
Okonkwo's life is dominated by fear,the fear of failure,so when he felt himself helpless and could not change the circle of events and he became useless for his comunity,he run away from this feeling wich was killing him and chose another way to die,to suicide and it was a mercy for him.
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Posted by roma72 on Saturday June 7, 2008 at 6:16 PM
Okonkwo knew that the British would hang him, therefore he chose to hang himslf rather than let his enemies do it.




