Prejudice In The Kite Runner

811 Words2 Pages

In life there are several factors that influence us. May it be with whom we surround ourselves with. But what we may not realize is that our culture or environment may influence us.
In the novel The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini, Amir, Hassan, and Baba are influenced by their culture. The Afghanistan culture steers their relationship with others and their personal decisions as a result of their prejudices and ethnicity.

In the case of, Amir his relationship with Hassan has been influenced by a form of prejudice. It is known that there is discrimination against the Hazaras due to the belief that the Pashtuns are above them. The Pashtuns are known as the upper class, Sunni Muslim (dominant sect), and the dominate ethnic group whereas the Hazaras are lower …show more content…

Take a look at Amir’s thoughts after asking Soraya a question, “Up to that point, our encounter could have been interpreted as a respectful inquiry,one man asking for the whereabouts of another man. But i’d asked her a question and if she answered, we’d be...well, we’d be chatting. Me a mojarad, a single young man, and she an unwed young woman. One with a history, no less… poison tongues would flap. And she would bear the brunt of that poison, not me-I was fully aware of the Afghan double standard that favored my gender.” As seen in the Afghanistan culture there is an apparent double standard. Soraya can’t answer a simple question without being criticised by others and Amir was well aware of it. In Afghan standards, this was a bold question that could lead to scandal in which Soraya reputation would be jeopardized. . For women were expected to be a certain way towards men for instance, women were not allowed to make explicit contact with men and women were not allowed to make eye contact with men. In the Afghan society a woman's role is dictated by social rules which shows women as lesser individuals than

More about Prejudice In The Kite Runner

Open Document