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Over
the last three decades, a war-torn Afghanistan has witnessed massive
refugee emigrations to Pakistan and Iran. Much of the Afghan urban
middle-class fled to America and Europe where they have struggled
to sustain their heritage and play a role in the politics of their
country from afar. Khaled Hosseini's family left Kabul for California
via Peshawar when the civil war broke out in 1980 .
In
The Kite Runner, his debut novel, Hosseini, also a physician, brings
his culture and people to a western readership. This is done through
a fictionalised account of the enduring though painful relationship
between a father and his two sons.
Hosseini's narrator is the young and privileged Amir who
lives in a sprawling mansion in the Wazir Khan neighbourhood of
Kabul with his merchant father and two servants. Amir is a Sunni
Muslim whereas his devoted young boy-servant Hassan is part Hazara.
Hassan and Ali, his father, are Amir's faithful companions throughout
his early childhood in Kabul before the Communist coup, when peace
reigned amidst a cultured and educated Afghan people.
The
story is one of friendship and betrayal, secrets and lies, greed
and jealousy. The fragility of the relationship between Amir and
Hassan as young boys is echoed in that between Amir and Baba, his
father. Yet both relationships develop, run the test of time and
evolve to build bridges of trust.
The novel begins with enthralling descriptions of Afghanistan
as a country of peace, love and music; where dried mulberries, bunches
of blood-red pomegranates, oranges, honey and kites are part of
an almost idyllic lifestyle.
Amir enjoys his evening treks to the top of the hillock behind
his house where he eats bold red pomegranates and reads passages
from Persian classics to Hassan. Hassan does household chores during
the day whilst the rich kid is driven to school in a Ford Mustang.
Baba secretly hopes that his son will develop the traditional interests
of an Afghan boy, rather than writing poetry and short stories which
he sees as a sheer waste of time.
Despite the fact that Hassan is also eager to go to school,
he bears Amir no resentment and is, in fact, a loyal companion to
a boy whose mother died in childbirth and whose father is often
preoccupied. "We would sit across from each other on a pair
of high branches, our naked feet dangling, our trouser pockets filled
with dried mulberries and walnuts
. I can still see Hassan
up on that tree. A face like a Chinese doll chiselled from hardwood,"
Amir recalls.
Hassan's
loyalty is apparent right from their childhood escapades through
to the end when it becomes Amir's turn to prove his worth and his
devotion. As a boy servant, Hassan protects Amir from the sadistic
Assef, armed with his infamous stainless steel brass knuckles and
his band of neighbourhood bullies. Amir, in turn, entertains Hassan
by reading him heroic Afghan folk tales.
Hassan's recognition as an accomplished kite flyer (at the
annual kite flying tournament), a huge spectator sport, leads to
sectarian concerns. Capturing prized kites when their lines are
cut during a competition, Hassan is brutally assaulted for being
a Shiite.
He writes: "For
kite runners, the most coveted prize was the last fallen kite of
a winter tournament. They thought of it as a trophy of honour
When
the sky cleared of kites and only the final two remained, every
kite runner readied himself for the chance to land his prize
And
when the last kite was cut, all hell broke loose."
Hassan is mocked by the boys for his ethnicity, his Mongoloid features
and his hare lip but he stoically ignores their taunts and moves
away. However, he is eventually captured, cornered and sexually
assaulted by the bullies who later emerge as adult Taliban officials.
Hosseini's vivid recollections of pre-revolutionary Afghanistan
are brimming with warmth and humour but also outline the deadly
divisions between ethnic groups.
Amir, who does not rescue Hassan from Assef, but hides for fear
of his own life, is tortured by memories of Hassan's suffering as
an adult.
Baba personifies all that is reckless, spirited and arrogant in
his dominant Pashtun tribe. He enjoys watching the Afghan national
pastime, buzkashi, in which galloping horsemen bloody one another
as they compete to spear the carcass of a goat. Yet, he is generous
and tolerant when he presents Hassan with a birthday present which
constitutes an operation to repair his hare lip.
After the Communist coup, Baba and Amir escape to the US where Baba
works long hours at a gas station to put his son through school
and also sells goods at a weekend flea market , along with other
Afghan exiles. The relationship between father and son changes dramatically
as they come to rely on each other on an equal footing. Hosseini's
narrative-in-exile moves swiftly as he depicts a great yearning
by the older generation for their once stable and beautiful country,
now deemed a distant memory. Many of these exiled Afghans, once
generals in their own country, manage to keep their ancient standards
of honour and pride alive.
The novel recalls the atrocities of the Taliban regime as Hosseini
traces the story of Hassan and that of his wife and son back to
a Kabul now destroyed by the ravages of war.
The dramatic tension builds up as the reader walks with Amir through
the streets of Kabul on his search for Hassan's young son, Sohrab.
Haunting images: a man who is desperate to feed his children attempts
to sell his artificial leg in the market; an adulterous couple stoned
to death in a stadium during the halftime of a football match; a
young boy forced into prostitution, are all part of the latter end
of the novel, rendering its political content brutal. Such vignettes
also remind one that the old way of life has all but gone.
When Amir meets Assef, his dreaded nemesis - now a Taliban official,
he survives a bloody confrontation to settle old scores. The old
Amir momentarily makes way for the brave new man who has come to
exact revenge. With good triumphing over evil, this part of the
novel seems more like a folk tale.
Political events drive the novel and at its core is the tragic fate
of a country and its people who show remarkable resilience in the
face of constant violence, displacement, and death.
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