Hosseini's The Kite Runner: Unknotting the Strings of Oppression
Theodora Guliadis
Issue date: 10/14/05 Section: Arts & Features
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Amir, the story's protaganist, and his father, Baba, immigrate to the United States for safety. Although Baba was successful, respected and opulent in Kabul, he succumbs to a more humble lifestyle for himself and his son in Southern California. Hosseini stretches this story from the Middle East to depict how Amir's bitter guilt stemming from his betrayal of his friend relentlessly haunts him. This guilt never disappears, even when he develops into a handsome and intelligent man and marries his love, Soraya. It all comes to a fore, however, when he receives a call from an exiled acquaintance in Pakistan informing him that his friend and his family were executed, with the exception of a son who resides in Kabul orphanage and must be rescued.
The main story, a story set against the backdrop of inhumane cruelties and cultural struggle, begins here. The Kite Runner is not only a historical account of Afghanistan's civil war or a story about maintaining culture miles away from home, but also a more universal story of redemption. Friendship, history, kinship and salvation are themes woven throughout the book that ultimately dovetail to blend Amir's personal struggles against inner demons with overall human attempts at surviving in Afghanistan.
Hosseini meticulously depicts the constant repression and turmoil that Afghans have faced for years. First, he accesses Amir's childhood memories, including his attempts to please his successful yet strict father Baba, illustrating a tense father-son relationship. He greatly emphasizes his delightful memories with his best friend Hassan (a Hazara who is the son of Baba's deformed servant Ali ) during Zahir Shah's monarchy, before it was overthrown. He and Hassan are nursed from the same mother at birth and are in such a sense brothers; they establish a strong sense of kinship until Amir betrays his greatest friend. Although he has enjoys many wonderful moments with Hassan, Amir perceives, in all his ignorance and childlike innocence, the caste system marring his community.
2008 Woodie Awards
