Khaled Hosseini's The Kite Runner

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How can we help a child in a country where help is hard to find? Every day the children of Afghanistan are starving. They beg for food, but nobody has any to spare. The citizens of Afghanistan want to help the children, but they have to care for their families before they can save another. In Khaled Hosseini’s novel The Kite Runner we get a sense of how thousands of starving children in Afghanistan are tortured and abused due to the lack of rights for children. What would you do if you were a citizen in Afghanistan and an orphan came up to you and begged you to spare a little food? Would you give the child food or would you keep it for your family? There are so many children in orphanages that the owners have a difficult time feeding all of …show more content…

Assef is Amir’s childhood enemy, he is the one who raped Hassan, who was Amir’s best friend. When Amir finds out that Hassan is his half brother, he also finds out that he has a son, Sohrab, who is an orphan due to the death of his parents. Amir sets out to find Sohrab and when he reaches the orphanage, he learns that one of the Taliban officers has taken him. So, now Amir goes to the Taliban officer’s house just to find out that Assef is the man who has been buying all these children. Amir is disgusted with the way that Assef dressed Sohrab and made him dance like a woman. Assef took away Sohrab's dignity just like he took away Hassan’s. This is just one example of how children are tortured in Afghanistan. Children are also used for cheap or free labor. They are put to work at very young ages, this is extremely dangerous, but many people do not care about the children, all they care about is that they don’t have to pay a child to work. An orphanage is no place for a child. A child should be able to play and be happy, but the orphans of Afghanistan have more to worry about. They have to worry if they’ll have food to fill their stomachs. They’re scared that they will never have a true home. They are sad that they will never get to see their families again, and unfortunately, some of them don’t even remember their

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