Chinua Achebe's "Things Fall Apart" And Toni Morrison's "Beloved": Religion

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...has been all about survival a state of mental, physical, spiritual, political, social and religious survival. By clutching to their dreams and aspirations through the utilization of religious values, Okonkwo's people were better equipped to withstand the existent torrent of despair and disheartenment that surrounded their disparaging situation. Indeed, one can readily argue that they were on a mission to find themselves in spite of the fact that everything they had come to know as being representational of their heritage had been infiltrated, damaged and callously disregarded by the Europeans. They "pride themselves on their indifference to all the ceremonies which bind and express the life of the tribe"(Moore, 63) The urgency of their own minds' determination compelled them to seek out alternative options in order to maintain their survival, yet it was not easy living within the shadow of the powerful Europeans, a collective group of individuals who did not encourage Umuofia's individual religious freedom. To say that Okonkwo's...

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