Monday, October 29, 2012

A Downfall In Fatherhood: Things Fall Apart

The Collapse in Fatherhood in Things Fall Apart

One of my closest friends had an extremely unstable and difficult relationship with his father. He said that his father would put on a public display praising him among family and friends but behind closed doors he was often berated. These insults were so hurtful that he referred to them as land mines. The consequences of these hurtful “land mines” left mental scars that resulted in a deep schism between father and son. This also led to an emotional collapse with his father causing irreparable damage that affected his life to this today. In Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, we see a breakdown between a father and son relationship which created a very detrimental effect. A relationship between a father and son can have a decidedly profound impact on each other’s lives. Whether this relationship is bifurcated, the psychological effects of having intimate or inadequate parenting skills can have a nurturing or depriving effect on a child's personality from birth all throughout adulthood. The carved figure of a son that Okonkwo had hoped for was erased due to his egoistic character and terrible parenting skills.
The most prominent and compelling theme in the novel originates from the main character Okonkwo and his ongoing battle to be different from his own father. "And no Okonkwo was ruled by one passion- to hate everything that his father Unoka had loved. One of those things was gentleness and the other was idleness" (Achebe 28). This quote implies that Okonkwo’s father had a negative impact on him, which resulted in Okonkwo himself constantly trying to avoid his father’s character traits. His extreme hatred towards weakness was heightened by his father, who didn’t uphold these ideals the way he felt he should have. According to Achebe, the main character detested his father at a very young age, “Even as a little boy he had resented his father’s failure and weakness, and even now he still remembered how he had suffered when a playmate had told him that his father was agbala.”(28). The Igbo tribe uses the term “agbala” which is used to describe “woman”. Okonkwo considered his father to be weak, effeminate, poor, disgraceful, and always in debt to his fellow tribe people. Okonkwo’s life rotates around the fear of becoming a failure and adopting the pitiful misfortune which had befallen his father. Due to this self-rooted perception of failure there are indications that he tries to rise above his father’s pathetic legacy.
The breakdown of Okonkwo’s relationship with his son is evident throughout this novel. The reason for this tumultuous relationship is, Okonkwo is too engrossed in maintaining his status quo and the relationship was governed by his own beliefs, principles and his “right way to do right things”. He abided by and treated his family in a strict manner as he believed that showing affection revealed a sign of social weakness. Consequently, the disheartening lack of respect and love was malnourishing on the social fabric and cohesiveness of the family.This story maintains a constant theme of conflict. Nwoye lives in perpetual fear of his father. Okonkwo constantly chastises his son and finds fault with everything he does. He threatens his son and does not hesitate to verbally abuse him. For example, when he is teaching Nwoye to manage seed-yams, he threatens Nwoye with physical abuse if he does not cut up the yams properly: “If you split another yam of this size, I shall break your jaw. You think you are still a child. I began to farm at your age. I will not have a son who cannot hold up his head in the gathering of the clan. I would sooner strangle him with my own hands'" (Achebe 59). This is an inappropriate and harsh way for a father to discipline his son.
Whether corporal punishment was accepted in the Ibo culture or not, Okonkwo’s verbal and physical abuse weakened the relationship with Nwoye until he left for the missionaries. Although Okonkwo seems to want what was best for his son Nwoye to prosper as a real man, I believe that it is immoral to impose control through violence or threats thereof. When it comes to parenthood, Okonkwo has tunnel vision which inevitably led him disgracing his son and making mistakes as his own father did. “I will not have a son who cannot hold his head in the gathering of the clan. I would sooner strangle him with my own hands. And if you stand staring at me like that,” he swore, “Amadiora will break your head for you!” (Achebe 60). This iterates the brutal way that Okonkwo treated his son and reinforces Okonkwo’s deplorable parenting skills.
In the story there was also an atrocious and tragic incident where Okonkwo killed his adopted son, Ikemefuna. He heard Ikemefuna cry, “My father they have killed me! As he ran towards him. Dazed with fear, Okonkwo drew his machete and cut him down. He was afraid of being though weak” (Achebe 106) .He was in a dilemma at a point in time but it all ended up with the murder of an innocent kid. I pondered if Okonkwo can kill a child he was very close to, what would stop him from killing Nwoye, his own flesh and blood? He was so consumed with the clan’s customs and portraying toughness that he actively participated in committing this immoral act. Because of this action, his biological son grew a tinge of anger and hatred towards him day by day. He did not love his children enough or show them compassion.

The killing of Ikemefuna is a demonstration of how the tribe has these beliefs and rituals that are often detrimental and illogical. According to the quote, “Okonkwo did not taste any food for two days after the death of Ikemefuna. He drank palm wine from morning till night, and his eyes were red and fierce like the eyes of a rat when it was caught by the tail and dashed against the floor” (109). Although Okonkwo feels he is doing the right thing in raising Nwoye, his harsh treatment drives his son further away from him. “At any rate, that was how it looked to his father, and he sought to correct him by constant nagging and beating. And so Nwoye was developing into a sad-faced youth” (Achebe 16). Nwoye felt no love or attention from his father. This naive and amiable twelve year old struggled in the shadow of his powerful and demanding father. Nwoye’s relationship with his father progressively deteriorates because he is unable to tolerate his father’s dictatorial attitude.
In chapter 17, Achebe gives an insight into how displeased the main character became when he found out his son was mingling with the Christians. To Okonkwo, that was a sacrilegious act and a profound personal and cultural betrayal. Yet it was the wretched relationship between them that forced the son to follow the missionaries. Nwoye had to make a life-changing decision of converting from the Ibo culture to Christianity. “Nwoye turned round to walk into the inner compound when his father, suddenly overcome with fury, sprang to his feet and gripped him by the neck ” (Achebe 240).  This incident provides further proof of the father’s antipathy and impatience with his son which could have resulted in his death was it not for the uncle’s intervention.
Analyzing this story, it can be perceived that Nwoye was estranged from the folklore and creed of the clan. He undermines his father’s social approval and rejected everything that he stood for. Okonkwo’s death came exactly as Nwoye was becoming cognizant of his function within the clan and started to develop a sense of self- awareness. Overall, Okonkwo failed in his quest to raise his son uprightly lost his son by virtue of his own shortcomings. His rejection of his father’s lifestyle formulated a strange parallel rejection of his own son. Should Okonkwo have placed less emphasis on his title, Nwoye would not have ran away to pursue an alternative lifestyle, separate and alien to his clan. As exhibited in the anecdote, good parenting abilities are vital to maintain a viable relationship with children. The value of a father in children’s life should never be miscalculated or underestimated.




Works Cited

 Achebe, Chinua. Things Fall Apart. New York: Anchor Books, 2010. E-book.

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