The Kite Runner Comparison

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Kite Runner Comparison Essay In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, several major themes arise. One of the most pronounced theme is the idea of redemption for one’s past wrongdoings. The protagonist, a wealthy envious Afghan boy named Amir, retells the traumatic story of his childhood. The main characters are Amir and his childhood friend and house servant, Hassan. The story explains the trials and joys of fathers and sons, friends and bullies, and cowardice and bravery. Amir struggles throughout the novel between getting acceptance from his father Baba and being a friend to Hassan. A meaningful quote from Hassan, “for you a thousand times over”, is a repeating theme throughout the novel. It eventually guides and drives …show more content…

He actually gets most of his encouragement from his father’s friend and business partner Rahim Khan, who ultimately plays the key role for Amir, both for his direction in life and his redemption for his regrets. Once readers learn Amir’s past, they realize the issues he experienced and the events that came into play as the plot unfolds. Amir seeks redemption for his betrayal of Hassan, due to his cowardice during Hassan’s rape, his betrayal of Hassan after the incident, and of his committing to the dishonoring sin in Afghani culture. Amir must depart on a long and deteriorating journey for the long awaited goal of complete redemption that will take him back to his violent and war-torn homeland decades …show more content…

Amir feels so guilty that he admits “I [Amir] watched Hassan get raped,’ I said to no one…A part of me was hoping someone would wake up and hear, so I wouldn’t have to live with this lie anymore…I understood the nature of my new curse: I was going to get away with it.”. He realizes that he is going to get away with his betrayal and, yet he feels terrible. He finally got what he wanted the attention and approval of his father, still he felt awful for abandoning his friend when he needed him most. Amir realizes that because he got away with it, he should be punished in some way so he can then feel redeemed. Therefore, he tries to get Hassan to hit him with a pomegranate in order to feel redeemed from his sin. “’Hit me back!’ I spat…I wished he would. I wished he’d give me the punishment I craved, so maybe I’d finally sleep at night. Maybe then things could return to how they used to be between us.” But, since Hassan refuses to hit him, Amir commits another sin. He accuses Hassan of stealing, so his father would kick Ali and Hassan out. Amir had thought of this because in the book Baba tells Amir that only stealing is a sin worth punishing. “I took a couple of the envelopes of cash from the pile of gifts and my watch, and tiptoed out…I lifted Hassan’s mattress and planted my new watch and a handful of Afghani bills under it…I knocked on

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