Hassan In The Kite Runner

550 Words2 Pages

In the novel The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini portrays the character of Hassan as a person who is empathetic to all living beings and due to this he takes on the responsibility of upholding good morals in every situation he is confronted with. Even though Hassan experiences a great deal of suffering, never once does he let that compromise his ethics. From the moment of his birth, Hassan faces discrimination from other ethnic groups in Afghanistan for being Hazara. Hassan, while being treated as inferior by the majority of the population in his country, is able to adhere to his principles where many would have turned cruel. His character contrasts with the protagonist in The Kite Runner, Amir, who is a part of the ethnic majority, Pashtuns. Despite their ethnic differences, Amir and Hassan’s beginnings were much the same. As infants. both of them lost their mothers and a kind of kinship formed between them. They learned to walk in the same yard and said their first words under the same roof. The first word ever said by Amir was “Baba”, which translates to “father”. While the first word said by Hassan was “Amir”. This …show more content…

When Baba confronts Hassan and his father, Ali, Hassan tells Baba that he was the one who stole from Amir. By doing this he sacrifices his morals and relationship with Baba for Amir. Even after the boy he thought of as a brother betrayed him Hassan remains loyal. If not for Hassan’s influence on Amir’s life, he would not have rescued Sohrab. Amir is inspired by Hassan’s actions. There are times in The Kite Runner, when he thinks about what Hassan would have said, thought, and done in a situation. At the end of the novel, when Amir runs the kite and connects with Sohrab, he echoes the words of Hassan “For you, a thousand times over”, Amir also echoes Hassan’s actions on his journey to redeem

Open Document