Khaled Hosseini's The Kite Runner

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Discrimination, bigotry and class structure are all very present in Afghan Society. This is outlined well in Khaled Hosseini’s novel The Kite Runner, where each character experiences or witnesses one of the aforementioned characteristics of society. The incessant use of discrimination in the novel is significant for many reasons, the most prominent of which is that these elements of society are still present today. The Kite Runner helps students understand how unjust life can be, and how fortunate we are to be so far removed from such circumstances. The three dominant points in the story about discrimination, bigotry and class structure are how women are viewed and treated; how Hazaras are seen as inferior; and the differences between Amir’s old neighbourhood versus the rest of Afghanistan.

Women are not treated as equals to men in Afghanistan; they are expected to sit quietly and do what the men in their life want them to do. Many of the women in The Kite Runner are victims of such injustice, and have to deal with the harsh consequences of making mistakes. Soraya, Amir’s wife, experiences these consequences endlessly from a trivial mistake she made as a teenager. As a girl, Soraya ran away with an Afghan man who was into drugs. All of the Afghans in Virginia had talked about it, and Soraya had been forced to live with a terrible reputation ever since. Years later, at Soraya’s cousin’s wedding, she overheard a conversation between two middle-aged women. “That boy did well not to marry his cousin.” one of the women remarked, and Soraya broke down into tears in the car later. “It’s so f***ing unfair. Their sons go out to nightclubs looking for meat and get their girlfriends pregnant, they have kids out of wedlock and no one says a...

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... Afghanistan that one may not ever know what it’s like in the ‘real’ world.

Most of the population in Afghanistan experienced many hardships in their daily lives. In the novel The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini brilliantly depicts what life is really like in Afghanistan from a privileged boy’s point of view, and his horror when he realizes that Afghanistan is not, despite how he grew up, a very nice place. Discrimination and bigotry are ever-present in Afghan society, and no one is exempt from the brutality of the Taliban. If any of the restrictions are breached, the Taliban will publicly hang, ‘stone’, or otherwise execute the offender. Discrimination, bigotry and class structure have always, and will likely always be around in Afghan lives. Afghanistan has become a place of death and destruction, and people that live there are constantly fearful for their lives.

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