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Yet it was the second episode of season 2 that introduced one of the show’s most intriguing characters: Mr. Eko, played by Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje. While Lindelof and Abrams seemingly had big plans for the mysterious Nigerian priest, who was found with the tail section survivors on the other side of the island, his run was cut short on November 1st, 2006, when he was abruptly killed off in Season 3’s “The Cost of Living.”
Mr. Eko’s Integral Role in Lost Season 2

As Mr. Eko once said, “Do not mistake coincidence for fate.” During his brief one-season run, Akinnuoye-Agbaje’s Mr. Eko became the new spiritual center of Lost. A former warlord, Eko, brought yet another layer of mystery to the chaos of the Island. His backstory included killing a man to protect his brother as a young boy, and eventually smuggling drugs via Virgin Mary statues in a plane flown by that same brother, who had taken the opposite life path and become a priest. When he finds said plane crashed on the island, his story becomes an essential part of the show’s narrative. His arc from violence to unshakable faith was the perfect foil to Locke’s own faith beginning to crumble. In many ways, Eko became the new “man of faith.”
Eko’s final episode in season 3, “The Cost of Living,” pushed his faith to its furthest limits in a fitting goodbye that came too soon. In the flashbacks, Eko had become a priest to replace his brother. Yet, in an act of violence, the church is desecrated, and Eko repents once and for all, making a deal with God to build his brother a new church. On the island, Eko has visions of his brother, and in true Lost fashion, as Eko confronts his sins, his brother is revealed to be the smoke monster, who judges and subsequently kills him. The rest of the islanders, whose storylines involve the Pearl station and Hydra island, are left with a final message from Eko relayed by Locke: “We’re next.”









