I came across Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie in secondary school while preparing for my WAEC exam. It was one of the recommended texts, and at first, I saw it as just another school requirement. But when I started going through the pages, the book became real to me. The characters, the silence in their house, the fear, the moments of hope, all stayed with me. Even now, I still think about Kambili, Jaja, and their father.
At the center of the story is Eugene Achike, the father of Kambili and Jaja. He is successful, wealthy, highly respected in society, and very religious. But inside his house?? He is a dictator. He controls everything......what his children eat, when they speak, when they study, how long they pray, and what they must think. He believes that strictness is love, and he uses fear as a tool for discipline.
But instead of building a peaceful home, he builds a prison.
Right from the beginning, you feel the tension. In Chapter One, Kambili says,
"Things started to fall apart at home when my brother Jaja did not go to communion."
What seemed like a small act of rebellion was a huge one in their home. Their father saw it as disobedience, and you could feel the storm that was about to come. That single moment showed how much pressure the children lived under......to obey, to be perfect, to never question authority.
One of the most powerful scenes was when Papa, as they fondly call their father, poured hot water on Kambili's feet. Shey says "The pain was raw and hot and it squeezed tears out of my eyes. I bit my lips so hard I tasted blood". This reminded me that abuse doesn't always come from strangers. Sometimes it comes from people who believe they are doing the best for us, it comes from love that is twisted by fear and obsession.
Kambili, the narrator, is a fifteen-year-old girl who barely speaks. Her words are careful, and her movement quiet. She tries so hard to please her father because she believes that is what she's supposed to do.
Her brother Jaja, on the other hand, is a little bolder, but also suffers in silence. Their mother, Beatrice, is gentle but also a victim of Papa's violence. There are moments when she had a miscarriage after a beating, and yet she still stays.
Many readers, including myself, wonder why she didn't leave.
Everything changed when Kambili and Jaja were sent to their Aunty Ifeoma's house. Ifeoma is Papa's sister. She is a university lecturer and a single mother, living in a modest flat with her three children. Unlike Eugene's house, her home is full of laughter, debates, jokes, and noise. For the first time, Kambili sees children talking back, asking questions, and even disagreeing with adults..... something she never imagined possible.
During their stay, she and her brother Jaja began to change. They start to smile, speak more, and Kambili even falls in love with a young priest. But when they returned home, the silence felt even heavier. Jaja began to rebel in small ways; he stopped obeying all of Papa's rules, talked back, and even made decisions for himself.
The final chapters were heartbreaking. Papa's violence got worse. In the end, Mama finally does something drastic to protect what was left of her family. She poisoned her husband, which led to his death, and Jaja takes the fall for it, showing how much he has grown.
The issues Purple Hibiscus raises are still happening today. Strict parenting is very common in many homes. Some parents believe that the only way to raise responsible children is through fear, harsh discipline, and complete control. But just like in Purple Hibiscus, many children raised this way end up emotionally damaged, or worse, they rebel in destructive ways.
In today's world, modern strict parenting doesn't always look like Eugene's beatings or hot water punishment
Sometimes, it looks like constant criticism of a child's effort, yelling and shouting, silencing their opinions, and making decisions for them that are against their will.
Some parents believe they are protecting their children, but in reality, they are damaging their children emotionally, socially, and otherwise. And when children finally reach a point where they can't take it anymore, they rebel and in the worst way ever.
Jaja's quiet rebellion, starting with a skipped communion, was the beginning of a long-overdue awakening. It showed us that rebellion doesn't always come with shouting or slamming doors. Sometimes it begins with silence, refusing to play along, choosing a different path, daring to breathe freely. And when children finally push back against oppressive parenting, it’s not always out of hate, it’s often out of survival.
Purple Hibiscus is more than just a novel. It is a mirror to many families where love is confused with control. It invites us to question the cost of obedience and what freedom really means inside the walls of a home.
P.S. Cover Image edited in Canva.