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Guilt In The Kite Runner By Khaled Hosseini

723 Words3 Pages

No person likes to be found in a complication. Unsure of what to do and blinded by the truth that the problem ever occurred people turn away. They do not want to accept what is true or real. Submission from guilt read in The Kite Runner does not only hurt the victim, it also hurts the witness. In The Kite Runner, two boys, Amir and Hassan, grow up together in Kabul. Amir and Hassan already face a problem because Hassan is a Hazara (lower class), but Amir does not mind. Amir and Hassan come across a group of three boys one day. The leader of the group, Assef, threatens to “beat” Amir for “hanging out with a Hazara,” nonetheless Amir does not listen because he sees no difference (Hosseini 41). Months pass by and the two boys are at a kite fighting tournament. As Amir kills the last flying kite Hassan chases the losing kite to claim victory. Trying to find Hassan, Amir comes up the three boys …show more content…

Amir cannot live with the fact that he had framed Hassan for “stealing money and a watch (Hosseini 105).” Sohrab is ultimately Amir’s way of becoming un-blinded from the guilt he had faced. Amir takes on the duty of caring for Hassan’s son and finally connects with Sohrab one day at a park while they have a kite fight. The guilt was resolved by the way the guilt had all started, kite running. At the first sight of Hassan’s rape, Amir did not want to get involved. Carberry suggested in a CNN article of gang rape that “Kids learn that they would rather not get involved because there is a power structure (Carberry 1).” Kids become overwhelmed with the truth, just as Amir did, and tend not to act upon the situation. Carberry talks about kids being “less likey” to act because they believe they cannot do anything about the deed already being done (Carberry 1). Amir was found in this trap and did not act because he had already seen the deed and did not know of any way to help the

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