Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Final Draft
Final Draft
Maddi Moyer
Honors English 11
26 April 2018
Culture Clashes
Cultures clash when people are not willing to understand a culture different from their
own. For groups with different beliefs to coincide, they must accept their differing perspectives.
In order for people to accept another culture, they must first attempt to understand the reasoning
behind others’ beliefs. In Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe examines a Nigerian tribe that is
invaded by European missionaries. The collision of the two worlds results in catastrophe when
the people of the two cultures cannot accept their differences. The Ibo people of Umuofia do not
see anything wrong with their culture, and therefore do not react well when the Christian
missionaries try to change it. The conflict between the Christian Missionaries and the Ibo people
represents the fact that cultures cannot coexist unless they are prepared to accept each other’s
The problem begins when the Christians come to assimilate the people of Umuofia. They
try to change everything about the Ibo culture, including their views on ogbanje children, twins,
Gods, and their problem solving tactics. The Christian missionaries believe that they are
benefiting Umuofia, but the Ibo people disagree. A missionary tells the people of Umuofia they
have “brought a peaceful administration to [them] and [their] people so that [they] may be
happy” (194). This is completely false. The missionaries’ main goal when coming to Umuofia is
to civilize their people and convert them to Christians. They do not have intentions to understand
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or accept their culture. While the Ibo culture may be bizzare by the Europeans’ standards, it is
The Christian and Ibo cultures are completely different from one another. The Ibo people
think that Christianity is a “lunatic religion” (154). Meanwhile, the Christians think the people of
Umuofia worship “gods of deceit who tell [them] to kill [their] fellows and destroy innocent
children” (146). The Christians’ main concerns are the Ibo peoples’ religion and their
government. The missionaries arrive, tell the Ibo people they shouldn’t believe in multiple Gods,
put them in jail, and humiliate them. The Christians should have simply shared their beliefs and
ideas instead of pushing them and punishing the people of Umuofia based on European laws. A
man from Umuofia states that “[the Christian] does not understand our customs, just as we do
not understand his. We say he is foolish because he does not know our ways, and perhaps he says
we are foolish because we do not understand his” (191). The issue is not that either culture or
religion is right or wrong. The issue is that they are unwilling to understand each other’s points
of view.
When the Christians first come, they do not create many problems for the people of
Umuofia. This is because Mr. Brown “came to be respected even by the clan, because he trod
softly on its faith” (179). Although there is no doubt that Mr. Brown is there to convert the Ibo
people, he is willing to accept that they have different opinions. It isn’t until Mr. Smith comes
that the missionaries and Ibo people can no longer stand to live together peacefully. This is
because he “condemned openly Mr. Brown’s policy of compromise and accommodation” (184).
Mr. Smith sees the Ibo people as evil and bans them from the church if they don’t follow
Christianity’s rules. Like many people in the world, he lacks the willingness to acknowledge that
The Christians and people of Umuofia may have been able to live together bloodlessly
had they attempted to appreciate their different cultures. In life, people will encounter an infinite
amount of individuals that have different ways of living their lives. Rather than try to forcefully
change the way individuals live, it is important that people instead try to appreciate diversity.
After all, the world would not spin if everyone was the same.