“The greatest accomplishment is not in never falling, but in rising again after you fall.”(Vince Lombardi). Vinces quote was said over 50 years ago but it still applies to things that still happen every day and impacts how you do and think of things. Redemption can lead to the feeling of accomplishment and feel as being full. In the kite runner Khaled Hosseini uses the charter of amir and the internal conflict of amir wanting redemption and feeling full in order to express the theme that redemption can lead to the feeling of being accomplished.
First setting and scene of the fight between amir and assef my first quote is during the fight scene it is when amir is on the ground getting completely destroyed by assef. it is towards the end of
the fight before sorab shoots assef's eye. “What's so funny?” “Assef bellowed. Another rib snapped ,this time the lower left. What was so funny was that, for the first time since the winter of 1975, I felt at peace.”(Hosseini 289) This quote relates to my thematic idea by how for the first time he has felt at peace or he has felt redeemed it was what amir wanted this whole book but he didn't know how but he found out and now he can finally feel happy and not to have to keep looking at the past. the second quote I have is just a couple sentences after the first quote it is where aamir is just on the ground just thinking how badly hurt he is. “my body was broken-just how badly I wouldn't find out until later-but I felt healed. Healed at last.I laughed.” (Hosseini 289) This quote relates back to the thematic idea by he says he felt healed at last he found his way to be redeemed and get healed from all of the bad things he had done in his life. Next the character of Amir who the whole redemption part of the book is about him trying to find his way to be redeemed. The first quote is at the beginning of the book at the end of the first chapter “ That was a long time ago, but it’s wrong what they say about the past, I’ve learned, about how you can bury it. Because the past claws its way out. Looking back now, I realize I have been peeking into that deserted alley for the last twenty-six years.”() Amir writes these words. With the foreshadowing of something big such as him wanting redemption. But we don't know what it means at the time. Amir says the past continues to claw its way out. Hinting at the scene of Hassan being rapped. But he tries to hide the past but it always finds a way out. The second quote is at the end of chapter 7 as Hassan is being rapped. “I actually aspired to cowardice, because the alternative, the real reason I was running, was that Assef was right: Nothing was free in this world. Maybe Hassan was the price I had to pay, the lamb I had to slay, to win Baba.”() Amir says this as Hassan is being rapped and rather than he help Amir just runs away. With Amir running away unknowingly he has himself after regret what he did and has to be redeemed for what he did. Amir's story of wanting and getting redemption so he can feel full or healed put him through things only one who is so dedicated like Amir would do. Many could learn that getting redemption is the best selfish thing you can do.
...e we are raising and when we think we are rising we are indeed falling. The saying is captured clearly when going through the four example; humility, redemption, fortitude and denial. The paradigms show how the once convict struggles in life till he gets to the point of self-realization and ultimately lives his life purposefully.
As he grows into a man and pushes his regrets to the side - though not ever completely out of his mind - he learns to live through and accept the pain he caused both himself and his best friend, Hassan. Towards the end of the novel, Amir goes to great lengths to earn the redemption he feels he needs in order to finally be at peace. The Kite Runner asks the audience what it truly means to be a good person - do we need to be born with goodness in our hearts, do we live the way that is comfortable and right according to ourselves, or do we have to constantly fail and prove that we are good?
The only way for Amir to redeem himself of his repercussions is through a challenging process of sacrifice and self-discovery. Although one is unsure at this point whether Amir succeeds at his endeavors, it is clear that this story
Redemption is gaining honor and self-forgiveness through a selfless act that reflects off of one’s regretful actions of their past. In the novel, The Kite Runner, Amir is the main character who goes through many life struggles and mistakes, then finds himself on a road to redemption. Amir and Hassan were best friends throughout their childhood and Hassan was the honorable, trusting best friend, the one to always take a stand for what he believed was right. Amir’s lack of courage caused him to stay silent in the worst of times, letting Hassan get tortured for the things he did not deserve. The themes of sacrifice, honor and redemption are carried out in many ways throughout this novel being shown through the actions of Hassan, Baba, and Amir.
People need redemption from our continual sin, otherwise, we just wallow in the shallowness of that aspect of our lives. Sin stays with an individual and effects the way their lives are lived. Unless they confront their past the sin will always be present. For example, Khaled Hossei’s , The Kite Runner explains how Amir- one of the main characters in the novel redeems himself because he undergoes strong guilt from his past sins. By examining Amir’s sins in his childhood, in his teenage years and in adulthood, his attainment of atonement is revealed. Particularly Amir atones for his past sins of being an eyewitness of Hassan rape who is his most loyal and devoted servant. He is influenced by this moment because he realizes that Hassan always
He needs to save Sohrab. Once he gets to where he is being held, he realizes Sohrab has been made into a sex slave for the Taliban. And, as if that wasn’t shocking enough, he realizes the leader of it all, the same man who executed the people at the soccer game earlier that day, is Assef. The same man who started this all in the first place. “His name rose from the deep and I didn’t want to say it, as if uttering it might conjure him. But he was already here, in the flesh, sitting less than ten feet from me, after all these years. His name escaped my lips.” “Assef.” (Hosseini 281) Amir is shocked, and angered about what he has just realized. Him and Assef have a conversation which eventually leads into Assef challenging Amir to a fight, over Sohrab. Assef beat up Amir very bad, and once the fight was over Sohrab confronts Assef, and tells him to stop. And Assef doesn’t listen, and yells at Sohrab to put it down. Sohrab then lets the slingshot shoot, aimed at Assef’s face, and it takes out his eye. While he’s hurt they all escape, this doesn’t prove to be the last trial though, as they are told by a man named Raymond Andrews that they can’t take him to America. But after awhile Soraya calls from California and says that they can take Sohrab back to America. But, once again, a problem gets in the way of Amir’s redemption. This time a rather serious one, when Amir goes to
Many people have done things that they can’t seek redemption for or can’t forgive themselves for, such as not being there for a friend when they need you most. Including Amir, from The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini. Amir is best friends with Hassan, a Hazara boy. They grow up together, and Amir later finds out that they are half brothers. Hassan helps Amir, but he allows a boy, Assef, and his group of friends to rape Hassan, which he doesn’t think he’ll ever be able to forgive himself for. Amir is redeemed because he receives letters from Hassan, he adopts Sohrab, and fights Assef.
If someone had the chance to save your life when you were in need, how would you feel if they decided to continue walking past you? A boy in The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini, starts out being selfish but later on realizes it is very important to take care of someone else when they are in need. In the article, “Good samaritan save man being mauled by pit bulls,” a selfless man saved a complete stranger from being killed by pit bulls. The “Parable of a good samaritan” describes how someone saves a traveling mans life with his generous mercy. In society, people should be responsible for one another and take care of one another. People aren’t here to purely take care of themselves.
“Forgive and forget” is a common phrase in our society. However, one may argue that mistakes are never truly forgotten. The Kite Runner suggests that the best way to resolve your past and make up for your mistakes is through doing good. Through Rahim Khan’s wisdom, the actions of Baba, and the journey of Amir, Khaled Hosseini illustrates that the need for redemption, due to unresolved guilt, can haunt someone throughout their life.
“For you, a thousand times over.” In The Kite Runner by Kahled Hosseini, there is a recurring theme of redemption that is portrayed by various literary devices. Kahled excellently juxtaposes devices such as irony, symbolism, and foreshadowing to show redemption within his first novel.
It is difficult to face anything in the world when you cannot even face your own reality. In his book The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini uses kites to bring out the major themes of the novel in order to create a truly captivating story of a young boy’s quest to redeem his past mistakes. Amir is the narrator and protagonist of the story and throughout the entire novel, he faces enormous guilt following the horrible incident that happened to his closest friend, Hassan. This incident grows on Amir and fuels his quest for redemption, struggling to do whatever it takes to make up for his mistakes. In Hosseini’s novel, kites highlight aspects of Afghanistan’s ethnic caste system and emphasizes the story’s major themes of guilt, redemption and freedom.
“It's wrong what they say about the past, I've learned, about how you can bury it. Because the past claws its way out” (Hosseini). In The Kite Runner, Hosseini shares Amir’s journey to atonement. As Amir states, he was unable to bury his past, similar to his father, Baba, who spent the majority of his life haunted by his sins. While both father and son are consumed by guilt, the way in which they atone for their iniquities is dissimilar. While Baba attempts to live his life according to the Afghan saying, “ Life goes on, unmindful of beginning, end...crisis or catharsis, moving forward like a slow, dusty caravan of kochis [nomads]” (Hosseini 356), Amir strays from this traditional perspective. Baba chose to continue his life unmindful of his past, while Amir, eventually decides to confront his. Although both Baba and Amir have acted immorally, the choices they make find redemption affect the success of their individual attempts. In the novel, Amir’s quest for atonement is more effective than Baba’s because he acts virtuously, while his father, acts selfishly. Ultimately, Amir is the more successful of the two because, in opposition to Baba, he seeks holistic atonement and is willing to make sacrifices to achieve redemption.
The themes of the loss of innocence and redemption is used throughout the novel The Kite Runner to make a point that one can lose innocence but never redeem it. Once innocence is lost it takes a part of oneself that can never be brought back from oblivion. One can try an entire life to redeem oneself but the part that is loss is permanently gone although the ache of it can be dampened with the passing of time and acts of attempted redemption. Khaled Hosseini uses characters, situations, and many different archetypes to make this point.
...a greater purpose than to only think selfishly, Amir is able to begin to develop a soul that is at peace with his mind. The novel, The Kite Runner instills that on humanity’s unending journey to true happiness, it is simply about developing, and awakening. Development is about realizing human potential and responding to life with morality and good judgment, while awakening is about discovering true nature and using God-given gifts and talents to give back to a world that offers so much to everybody. Only when the fundamentals of everyday life are transformed, and the transformation is genuinely felt, can it be said that true happiness is accomplished.
In a lifetime, one will face an abundance of personal battles in their decision making. When bad decisions result negatively, people find peace mentally in redeeming themselves of their sin through redemption. In Khaled Hosseini’s “The Kite Runner”, the main character, Amir, commits a sin and goes through great lengths to find redemption. Using metaphors, personification, and irony Hosseini expresses the theme of sin, suffering and redemption. Achieving redemption is a long journey people seek after suffering the consequences of sin.