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Q: In The Kite Runner, do you create characters and
events that are based on personal recollections or is the story
purely fictional?
A: The story line of my novel is largely fictional.
The characters were invented and the plot imagined. However, there
certainly are, as is always the case with fiction, autobiographical
elements woven through the narrative. Probably the passages most
resembling my own life are the ones in the US, with Amir and Baba
trying to build a new life for themselves. I, too, came to the US
as an immigrant and I recall vividly those first few years in California,
the brief time we spent on welfare, and the difficult task of assimilating
into a new culture. My father and I did work for a while at the
flea market and there really are rows of Afghans working there,
some of whom I am related to.
I wanted to write about Afghanistan before the Soviet war
because that is largely a forgotten period in modern Afghan history.
For many people in the west, Afghanistan is synonymous with the
Soviet war and the Taliban. I wanted to remind people that Afghans
had managed to live in peaceful anonymity for decades, that the
history of the Afghans in the twentieth century has been largely
pacific and harmonious.
Q:What are your recollections of the last days of the
Afghan monarchy and the subsequent invasion of the Soviet forces?
A: Kabul was a thriving cosmopolitan city with
its vibrant artistic, intellectual and cultural life. There were
poets, musicians, and writers. There was also an influx of western
culture, art, and literature in the '60s and '70s. My family left
Afghanistan in 1976, well before the Communist coup and the Soviet
invasion. We certainly thought we would be going back. But when
we saw those Soviet tanks rolling into Afghanistan, the prospect
for return looked very dim. Few of us, I have to say, envisioned
that nearly a quarter century of bloodletting would follow.
Q: Is Amir's youth synonymous with your adolescence?
A:I experienced Kabul with my brother the way Amir
and Hassan do: long school days in the summer, kite fighting in
the winter time, westerns with John Wayne at Cinema Park, big parties
at our house in Wazir Akbar Khan, picnics in Paghman. I have very
fond memories of my childhood in Afghanistan, largely because my
memories, unlike those of the current generation of Afghans, are
untainted by the spectre of war, landmines, and famine.
Q:
Can you shed light on the role of women at the time?
A:
I came from an educated, upper middle-class family. My mother
was a Persian and history teacher at a large high school for girls.
Many of the women in my extended family and in our circle of friends
were professionals. In those days, women were a vital part of the
economy in Kabul. They worked as lawyers, physicians, college professors,
etc., which makes the tragedy of how they were treated by the Taliban
that much more painful.
Q: Your novel touches on internal strife before and during
the Taliban government but lacks a strong focus on women.
A:
My own background is fairly liberal and so this notion of 'protecting
women from outside intrusion' is not in my nature, nor in my upbringing.
The Kite Runner is a story of two boys and a father, and the strange
love triangle that binds them. It so happens that the major relationships
in the novel are between men, dictated not by any sort of prejudice
or discomfort with female characters, but rather by the demands
of the narrative. The story of what has happened to women in Afghanistan,
however, is a very important one, and fertile ground for fiction.
I have started a second novel set in Afghanistan, and so far all
of the major characters are shaping up as women.
Q: Given the present state of politics and the American
agenda in the region, how do you perceive the future of Afghanistan
?
A:
I returned to Kabul this past March, after a 27-year absence. I
came away with some optimism but not as much as I had hoped for.
The two major issues in Afghanistan are a lack of security outside
Kabul (particularly in the south and east) and the powerful warlords
ruling over the provinces with little or no allegiance to the central
government. The other rapidly rising concern is the narcotic trade
which, if not dealt with, may turn Afghanistan into another Bolivia
or Colombia.
Equally
important is the lack of cultivable land for farmers, a profound
problem when you take into account that Afghanistan has always largely
been an agricultural country, and that even before the wars destroyed
lands and irrigation canals, only 5 per cent of the land was cultivable.
A great deal remains to be done in Afghanistan and the jury is out
as to whether the international community has the commitment and
the patience to see the rebuilding process through.
This last month, though, I have seen some cause for optimism. The
Bush administration tripled its aid package to Afghanistan. Karzai
finally (and courageously) announced that warlords will be forbidden
from holding office in the future government. And finally, NATO
agreed to expand the peacekeeping forces to troubled areas outside
of Kabul.
Q: Why did you return after 27 years?
A:
I returned to Afghanistan because I had a deep longing to see for
myself how people lived, what they thought of their government,
how optimistic they were about the future of their homeland. I was
overwhelmed with the kindness of people and found that they had
managed to retain their dignity, their pride, and their hospitality
under unspeakably bleak conditions.
I did see plenty that
reminded me of my childhood. I recognised my old neighbourhood,
saw my old school, streets where I had played with my brother and
cousins. And, like Amir, I found my father's old house in Wazir
Khan.
Q: Lastly, what were the reactions of Afghans in exile
in the US after reading your novel?
A:I
get daily e-mails from Afghans who thank me for writing this book,
as they feel a slice of their story has been told by one of their
own. So, for the most part, I have been overwhelmed with the kindness
of my fellow Afghans. There are, however, those who have called
the book divisive and objected to some of the issues raised in the
book, namely racism, discrimination, ethnic inequality etc. If this
book generates any sort of dialogue among Afghans, then I think
it will have done a service to the community.
Q: Can you tell me about your second novel?
A:I
am not sure how it will shape up, whether it will become one woman's
story or a family saga told from various women's viewpoints.
But it will also be set in Afghanistan's pre-Taliban days
and, I suspect, in present-day America. I wish I could tell you
more but I don't know a whole lot more myself about it.
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