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The Crocodile and His Son. Mrs. Kercher Comprehension Questions Key. Comprehension Questions. Ombure is a great crocodile chief, chief of the forests and waters, on whom life and prosperity of the Fan people depend. Ombure demands male and female human sacrifices.
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The Crocodile and His Son Mrs. Kercher Comprehension Questions Key
Comprehension Questions • Ombure is a great crocodile chief, chief of the forests and waters, on whom life and prosperity of the Fan people depend. • Ombure demands male and female human sacrifices. • The Fan chief provides sacrifices as long as he can, and when he can no longer do this, he attempts to escape from Ombure by moving his village.
Comprehension Questions • His fetish advises him, which is an object with magical protective power. • He is told to build a new village by a great lake. • First, Ombure commands the forest to show him the path taken by the Fan people. Then, he commands the Fan chief’s fetish to advise the chief to settle by a particular large lake.
Comprehension Questions • When the Fan people celebrate, Ombure emerges from the lake and kills the old Fan chief. • Ombure commands Spirit of the Storm to stop the Fan people in the forest and leave them no alternative but to return to their village by the lake. • He refuses to accept the daughter of the old Fan chief. • The daughter of the old Fan chief is the mother of the Son-of-the-Crocodile.
Comprehension Questions • He plans to kill Ombure. • He plans to accomplish this by making palm wine from the sap of the sacred palm tree and making Ombure drunk. • When he uses his weapons Ombure’s scales protect him from them. The weapons bounce off of his hide. • His mother gives him her fetish, which has power over Spirit of Lightening.
Comprehension Questions • The Spirit of Lightning kills Ombure. • Ombure is sleeping because he drank the palm wine, which made him drunk. • The Fan people dance a great funeral dance around Ombure’s corpse. They do this because they believe he was a great protector as well as a great enemy. This ritual demonstrates their respect for him in death as well as in life. • He teaches them to make boats from hollowed-out tree trunks so they can travel by water and trade with others.