Petals of Blood

by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o

Petals of Blood: Chapter 2 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Twelve years prior, Munira bikes into Ilmorog and begins cleaning the dilapidated four-room school. The town believes he’ll abandon the project soon, as previous teachers have done, but instead he teaches shepherds’ children outside on the grave of the legendary Ndemi. Offended, the diviner Mwathi wa Mugo orders Munira reprimanded, and an elderly woman Nyakinyua defecates hugely in the schoolyard. Later, she confronts Munira about coming from a city where Africans imitate white people; she accuses cities of stealing the town’s young and asks whether Munira has come to steal the remaining children. Munira, thinking how he wishes to be free of the past, accidentally sneezes in the old woman’s face; she flees.
The poor condition of Ilmorog’s school implies that Ilmorog is a rural town whose children have little opportunity for education. Munira offends the town’s diviner (traditional seer or soothsayer), which shows he doesn’t understand the town’s culture. When Nyakinyua accuses Kenyan people who live in cities of imitating white people and cities of stealing Ilmorog’s children, it suggests economic and cultural divides between urban and rural Kenya: the cities take young workers from the smaller towns, impoverishing them, and indoctrinates those young workers into behaviors that smaller-town people consider stereotypically white.
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Munira bikes to Abdulla’s shop and bar. Abdulla, a man with a crippled leg, recently moved to town with his donkey and a boy named Joseph. As Munira drinks a beer at Abdulla’s, three older farmers, including Njuguna, enter. They chat with Munira about a possible drought, but Munira doesn’t care about farming. Abdulla asks Munira about the school, and Munira says he wants to hire more teachers and hopes as an educated person to “pay back” the less educated people who fought for independence by teaching the children. Abdulla is skeptical of educated people, thinking they’re out for themselves, but one farmer praises Munira’s ideals.
Munira, from the city, doesn’t care about farming, which seems to be the townspeople’s main source of sustenance. His indifference suggests that he doesn’t understand the town’s economic realities or feel connected to nature. Munira wants to “pay back” other Kenyan people who fought for independence; he feels uncomfortable with his own non-participation in Kenya’s war for independence from the UK (Kenya became independent in 1963). Abdulla’s suspicion of educated people shows that Ilmorog’s townspeople don’t necessarily trust or value formal education.
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Later that night, Njuguna and the other farmers visit Nyakinyua and vouch for Munira’s decency to her and the other townspeople. Yet after a month, Munira can’t keep the shepherds’ children in school. Shocked at such recalcitrance in the modern 1960s, Munira goes to drink at Abdulla’s, who mocks him with the story of Nyakinyua defecating in the schoolyard.
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Munira bikes to Ruwa-ini to speak with his supervisor Mzigo. On the way, he sees three African men playing golf; young caddies dressed in rags wait on them. At Mzigo’s office, Mzigo blows off Munira’s concerns about the school but tells him he can hire UTs. He also claims he’ll drive to visit Ilmorog, complains about the road, and tells Munira he’s lucky to have a bike, not a car. Thinking how much he prefers the people of Ilmorog to Mzigo and the golfers, Munira asks whether he can really hire UTs. Mzigo says he can. .
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Before returning to Ilmorog, Munira bikes to Limuru to visit his family. He feels like the odd one out. His living siblings have prestigious careers or foreign educations, while his favorite sister Mukami—who got in trouble for playing and working with laborers on their father’s farm—recently died by suicide. His father Ezekieli, though a devout Presbyterian, is a stingy landowner who squeezes his religious workers, dismissing those who protest low wages as “devilish.”
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Quotes
As a high-schooler, Munira noticed the workers were more sincerely devout than his father Ezekieli; they made him want to confess a sin he’d committed with a woman in Kamiritho, but instead he burned the woman’s house in a little grass effigy and abandoned the effigy still on fire—which almost caused a barn to burn down.
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Munira’s father’s most sanctified worker was an elderly woman, Mariamu, who didn’t actually attend religious services. Mariamu’s son Nding’uri was Munira’s friend until Munira went away to Siriana for school; later, Munira learned the son was caught smuggling guns for the Mau Mau Rebellion and executed. Rumors also link Mariamu to Mau Mau fighters cutting off Ezekieli’s ear and to Mukami’s suicide, but Munira still has good memories of her.
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In Limuru, Munira sees the place where Mariamu’s hut used to be and wonders what happened to her. He goes to visit his own family; when he tries to tell his children stories about Ilmorog, his pretty yet prim, unsensual, and excessively religious wife (Julia) scolds him for “blaspheming.”
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 When Munira bikes back to Ilmorog, the people welcome him, appreciating that he won’t run away like the other teachers and that he “carrie[s] the wisdom of the new age.” Munira observes their way of life: they barter as much as they use money, consult the diviner Mwathi wa Mugo about when to plant crops, and argue in Abdulla’s bar about whether farming or herding livestock is better.
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In discussing farming versus herding, the people discuss which wealth white colonialists stole first and how the colonialists tricked them into accepting coins, useless in themselves, as “the true wealth.” Uncomfortable with his own non-participation in the struggle against colonialism, Munira changes the subject by asking who Ilmorog’s MP is. The town knows their MP’s name is Nderi wa Riera but not what he does for them; they’re more interested in why their youth keep leaving for the cities. Munira keeps asking questions to steer the subject away from politics; he’s tired and contemptuous of politics.
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Munira gets into a routine of working at school during the day and drinking at Abdulla’s in the evening. Abdulla, who has fickle moods, will sometimes remind Munira about Nyakinyua defecating in the schoolyard and will complain that the townspeople are suspicious of his donkey because it eats too much. He also verbally abuses his helper, the boy Joseph. When Munira suggests Abdulla send Joseph to the school, Abdulla blows him off. Despite Abdulla’s occasional hostility, Munira now prefers Ilmorog to his home life and hopes Mzigo leaves him alone there so he can avoid personal, familial problems.
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When April rains arrive, the townspeople are busy farming, and Munira sees them less at Abdulla’s. Though lonely, he strangely comes to feel like the “feudal head” of Ilmorog. In June, he takes his class outside to teach them the anatomy of flowers. When one child starts shouting about “a flower with petals of blood,” Munira corrects him, saying the color term is red. When another child finds a faded red flower, Munira explains that a worm has eaten the inside, which can prevent the flower from blooming fully, with its most intense color. The children begin asking Munira questions about why creatures eat each other and why God lets things happen. Flustered, Munira stops doing field trips; he feels more authoritative inside the schoolroom.
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One hot day, a beautiful woman (Wanja) approaches Munira outside and asks for water. He takes her into his house and gives her water. When she teases him that the townspeople were right about his spartan living quarters, he asks when she arrived in town. She says the night before. Worried that she heard about him so quickly, Munira wonders what the town says and thinks about him. He goes to check on the schoolchildren and resolves not to ponder insoluble questions like the “flower with petals of blood”; when he returns home, the woman is gone.
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That night, Munira goes to Abdulla’s, where he meets the woman again and—uneasy and aroused—buys her a beer. As they talk, he learns her name is Wanja, Nyakinyua is her grandmother, and she used to wrestle with boys in school. When Abdulla turns to Munira, Munira angrily anticipates Abdulla will humiliate him with the story of Nyakinyua defecating in the schoolyard. Instead, Abdulla asks whether he can go to school too, so he can wrestle with Wanja. When Munira jokingly asks what two adults would do in school, Abdulla and Wanja banter back that he should make them prefects to discipline the other students. Then Abdulla suggests that Munira wouldn’t want them in his school because they might lead a student strike.
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Munira tells Wanja and Abdulla that prefects have to know how “to lick the boots of those above” them. In school at Siriana, Munira was never great at that or anything else. The best student was Chui, who quoted Shakespeare and played football beautifully against white opposing teams. The other students nicknamed him Shakespeare and Joe Louis.
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When Siriana’s friendly headmaster—whom the students liked even though he was white—retired, the new headmaster Fraudsham refused to let the students wear shoes or eat decent food. Chui led the students in a strike. Inspired, Munira became another strike ringleader. Yet when Fraudsham called in the police, the strike ended. Munira and Chui were expelled. Munira concludes that whereas Chui ended up traveling to America, Munira retreated into himself.
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Abdulla yells at Joseph. Wanja tries to help Joseph clear the table; noticing a tear in Joseph’s trousers, she asks Munira whether Joseph is at school. Munira says no. Abdulla protests that with his crippled leg, he needs a helper around the store. Wanja tells Abdulla to send Joseph to school and offers to work in his place. Abdulla, in a gentler tone, tells Joseph to bring him another beer and then stop working.
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Though Ilmorog’s townspeople believe Wanja will soon move on, they are very happy when she ends up moving her things into a hut near her grandmother Nyakinyua’s. The townspeople end up throwing a party with singing and dancing to celebrate. The crops have changed, and people now walk around with flowers stuck to their clothes. Yet they worry that the pattern of rain and sunshine has been wrong all spring—and, indeed, the harvest isn’t good. Nevertheless, the townspeople accept “that God was the Giver and also the one who took away.”
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Wanja and Munira start up a low-key flirtation. Though Munira believes he doesn’t want an intense relationship, he feels he made himself vulnerable to her and Abdulla by telling them about Siriana and keeps almost bringing it up again. He’s also jealous of Wanja’s flirtatious friendship with Abdulla. One day, an airplane flies over Ilmorog, and Wanja comes to the school to ask Munira about it. He doesn’t know anything, and he ends up watching her buttocks as she leaves. Then he has a series of sexual dreams about her. He feels out-of-control and tormented.
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A few days later, engineers travel through Ilmorog surveying the land in preparation for a possible highway connecting all Africa. Munira, Wanja, and others come out to watch and question the engineers, but when Wanja sees the head engineer, she flees. Later, the townspeople discuss whether the highway would be good or bad: Some worry their own land will be appropriated for the road, while others hope it will help them transport their goods to better markets.
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The night after the engineers leave, Munira decides to make a move on Wanja. When he goes to her hut, Abdulla is there. At first Munira is jealous, but he feels better when Wanja and Abdulla inform him they’re celebrating Wanja’s decision to start working as a barmaid at Abdulla’s so Joseph can go to school. Wanja credits Munira’s “moving” story about Siriana for her decision to help Joseph. Abdulla, pleased, tells Wanja that she looks so young when she’s happy that it seems she should be in school too, not working.
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Wanja, becoming thoughtful, says the head engineer they saw earlier reminded her of something that happened long ago. When she was in primary school, a poor boy had a crush on her. One day, he walked her home and told her about his dream of becoming an engineer. At home, her mother questioned her about where she’d been. She answered back, a little cheekily, that she’d been strolling with her boyfriend. Her mother and father beat her for walking with a boy and for talking back. Wanja felt they were beating her partly because the boy was poor and partly to “work[] out something between them,” as they were becoming estranged.
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Quotes
Wanja felt her parents’ behavior was unjust and wanted revenge but had no power to get it. The incident turned her against school. Shortly after, a rich, married man (later revealed to be Kimeria) moved into her village and made friends with her father. The man gave Wanja’s family presents for Christmas, including a dress with a flower pattern for Wanja. Unbeknownst to Wanja’s parents, he began taking Wanja out in the city during school hours.
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Wanja’s math teacher, who desired her sexually, followed her during one of her absences, found out about her outings with Kimeria, and told her he’d inform her parents unless she had sex with him. When Wanja refused him, the math teacher told her parents—but rather than beating her, Wanja’s mother blamed her father for making friends with Kimeria.
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Wanja stopped seeing Kimeria, started studying hard, and did excellently in the “mock-CPE results.” The teachers were sure she would get into a good high school. But then Wanja discovered she was pregnant. When she told Kimeria, he said she could be his second wife, but his first wife would treat her terribly. Despite this, Wanja ran away to him rather than let her mother find out about the pregnancy. But when she showed up at his house, he laughed at her, saying he was too old for her and “a Christian.”
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Wanja concludes her story by saying that after Kimeria rejected her, she went to live with her cousin, still wanting revenge, and became a barmaid rather than continuing with school. That’s why it makes her sad when children aren’t allowed to go to school. She says Abdulla and Munira must celebrate Joseph’s matriculation and her first day of work at the bar the next night. When Munira demurs, Wanja insists he come and walk her home afterward. Abdulla and Munira leave, the latter thinking happily about “beautiful flowers.”
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