The Vietnam War: The Destruction Of Afghanistan

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The effects that this chaos had on the people and on the country as a whole were long lasting; they were mental, and emotional as well as the constant physical reminders like the old cities and neighborhoods that were then destroyed. Amir goes back to Afghanistan and he begins reminiscing about the old days. He compares how beggars were back when Baba was around to the beggars he now sees. It's different now, and much worse than before. It used to be mainly older people or adults. Now there is young children, possibly with their mothers. Some fathers could no longer afford the kids and their wives so they had to live on the streets while the fathers were off doing their own thing (Hosseini, 245). The destruction in Afghanistan has gotten much worse from what …show more content…

This was after the second war which he had watched in the safety of America. Now he was seeing it for real, in person (Hosseini, 243). The destruction in the country was absolutely horrible. The first war was bad enough and the second war definitely didn't help. It went from bad to worse and the people really didn't have any time to recover or escape. What is seen on a TV screen of a war thousands of miles away is completely different from witnessing it first-hand or through another person who actually lived through it. Amir then sees a dead body hanging by a restaurant. The body was beaten and covered in blood. Nobody seemed to pay attention to this sight. It was as if it was a normal thing (Hosseini, 259). Death as a result of all the violence was becoming a part of everyday life. People were now accustomed to it and didn't flinch when they saw a dead body or heard that someone had died. Families constantly faced death as a reality and had little opportunity to grieve in the privacy of their home partly because the living conditions were also so poverty-stricken. The cities were abandoned and turned to

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