CHAPTER 1: SUMMERY The narrator, a 15-year-old girl named Kambili Achike, who lives in Enugu, Nigeria, says that “things started to fall apart” in her family after one specific day: her 17-year-old brother Jaja refused to go to communion on Palm Sunday, and her Papa, Eugene, a devout Catholic, threw his missal (a Catholic liturgical book) in anger, breaking the ceramic figurines on the étagère (a piece of furniture with a series of shelves). Father Benedict insists that prayers and recitations be done only in Latin, not in the native language of Igbo as they are at many Nigerian churches. In his sermons Father Benedict praises Papa extravagantly, describing his virtues as a righteous publisher of the newspaper the Standard. He says that Papa always prints the truth and speaks out for freedom even when it is difficult or dangerous. Papa is a wealthy business owner, but his money has not corrupted him like the other “Big Men.”
On this Palm Sunday Papa notices that Jaja did not take the communion. When they arrive home Papa slams his missal down on the dining room table and interrogates Jaja about it. Jaja answers rebelliously, saying that he doesn’t like the wafer, and that if refusing to take communion means death, then he will die. Kambili pleads with her eyes for him to stop, but Jaja won’t look at her. Adichie opens with Jaja’s rebellion, and later shows just how important it is. Kambili hints at the “language of the eyes” that she and Jaja share.
Then Papa throws the missal at the étagère and breaks the small ceramic
figurines of ballet dancers. Kambili’s mother, Beatrice (Mama), comes in and immediately starts picking up the pieces of the figurines. Kambili feels suffocated in the silence. Papa sits down sipping his tea, Usually he gives Kambili and Jaja a “love sip” of his tea before he drinks it. Kambili likes this practice even though the tea always burns her tongue, because it proves Papa’s love for her—but today he does not, which disturbs Kambili.
Kambili goes upstairs to change and looks out the window at Mama’s red hibiscuses, which she uses to decorate the church. Many visitors also pluck the flowers as they pass