Amir's Relationship In The Kite Runner

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The Kite Runner is a novel about a distant family, the relationship between father and son, and also among two brothers as they deal with guilt and forgiveness. Amir the main character grows up in Kabul, Afghanistan prior to the Taliban regime. Amir spends most of his early childhood with a Hazara boy named Hassan. Hassan is Amir's best friend and illegitimate brother. The secret to the novel the boys are fathered by the same man. One single moment defines Amir when he witnesses with the rape of his brother by Assef. Amir must decide what to do and what kind of person he will become. Does he ignore the situation, or does he defend his best friend? "I had one last chance to make a decision. One final opportunity to decide who I was going to …show more content…

He shares the story of his early childhood to his adulthood. Amir is a complex character, and his traits often contradict one another. Amir is a fully developed, static character. He is the son of a very successful businessman in Kabul and is very sensitive about the lack of attention he receives from his father. The desire to please his father is the primary motivation for his unpleasant behavior early in the novel. After witnessing his best friend getting raped, he is driven by his feelings of guilt as he looks to find a way to redeem himself. "I watched Hassan get raped. I said to no one. A part of me was hoping that someone would wake up and hear so I wouldn't have to live with this lie anymore. That night I became an insomniac." (86) Looking back on the past Amir says, "There was so much goodness in my life. So much happiness. I wondered whether I deserved any of it" (278). But, Rahim Kahn tells Amir "There is a way to be good again," (2) and Amir ultimately he does so through courage and sacrifice; as he continues to tell his story as a form of …show more content…

Hassan is a loyal, trustworthy individual who is always there to listen when Amir needs him. Amir envies Hassan for the traits he processes. Amir says, "I had been the entitled half, the society-approved, legitimate half, the unwitting embodiment of Baba's guilt. [Hassan is] Baba's other half. The unentitled, under-priveleged half. The half who had inherited what had been pure and noble in Baba" (359). Hassan's defining traits include: bravery, selflessness and intelligence even though as a boy he is illiterate. As a Hazara minority, Hassan is considered inferior in Afghan society, but in Baba's eyes he is equal and just as lovable as Amir. Even though Hassan is not present in a substantial portion of the novel, he provokes a major role

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