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Chapter 5 Questions and Answers

Study Questions

1. What is Ani’s relationship with the ancestors?

2. Why are new yams offered to Ani and the ancestors at the festival?

3. Describe the New Yam Festival.

4. Does Ekwefi, Okonkwo’s second wife, really kill the banana tree?

5. Nwoye’s mother often calls Ezinma “Ezigbo.” What does this name
mean?

6. How does Okonkwo react when he hears the beating of the drums?

7. Why is Obiageli, Nwoye’s sister, crying?

8. Why does Ikemefuna look at the other children sternly when


Obiageli tells the adults the story about breaking her pot?

9. Why do Obiageli, Ezinma, and Nkechi serve their father food in this
order?

10. Why can’t Ezinma carry her father’s chair to the wrestling match?
Chapter 5 Questions and Answers
Answers

1. Ani is in close communion with the ancestors of the clan.

2. The people give honor and thanks to Ani and the ancestors by
offering them new yams at the festival.

3. The New Yam Festival is a big event; the women scrub the walls of
their houses and wash all the pots and bowls thoroughly. Wives and
children decorate themselves; relatives are invited to the feast; and
huge quantities of yam foo-foo and vegetable soup are prepared. The
feast is held on the first day; the wrestling matches are held on the
second day.

4. Ekwefi does not kill the banana tree. She simply removes some of
the leaves to wrap food.

5. “Ezigbo” means “the good one.”

6. The drums announcing the wrestling match fill Okonkwo with fire
and the desire to conquer and subdue. He moves his feet to the beat
of the drums.

7. Obiageli, Nwoye’s sister, is crying because she broke her water


pot.

8. Obiageli is acting sad in front of the adults. Ikemefuna does not


want the other children to tattle on Obiageli.

9. The girls serve their father food in this order because Obiageli is
the daughter of her father’s first wife; Ezinma is the daughter of her
father’s second wife; and Nkechi is the daughter of her father’s third
wife.

10. Ezinma cannot carry her father’s chair to the wrestling match
because this is a boy’s job. Men, women, boys, and girls play specific
roles in the Igbo society.

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