Personal Responsibility In The Kite Runner By Khaled Hosseini

1490 Words3 Pages

Being held accountable is a task. Whether it’s waking up in the morning going to work, raising our children to better than us (or our peers), or simply put, male gender roles for taking out the garbage. As humans we all have some type of personal responsibility that we all are faced with. Our personal responsibility is our willingness to take on our standard task(s) at hand. Without having personal responsibility, our image to society would be portrayed to as a… Within the text called “The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini, mainly tells tales about a boy named Amir whose childhood and adulthood centers around guilt, lies and deceit. Moreover, Phillips Roth’s text, titled “Nemesis” battles a man by the name of Bucky Cantor with the epidemic polio …show more content…

Me personally, I was taught by it at an early age. Being raised mainly by men, such as: Father, uncles and brothers you usually have it hard. Your mother can only give you love and affection but the males in your family can offer so much more than you can ever imagine. Inside of the text, “The Kite Runner” one of the many lessons Amir’s father, Baba, stated to him or towards him was he had to stand on his own two feet. Inside of chapter three was a quote to remedy that issue. Amir’s father stated to his friend Rahim: “A boy who won’t stand up for himself becomes a man who can’t stand up to anything” (Hosseini, p.22). In connection, Roth’s novel “Nemesis” had similar views into instilling personal responsibility in one at a young age. Bucky Cantor wasn’t raised by his father like Amir. However, he still had that male figure to coach him, being his grandfather. As a coach, Bucky wanted to, “Teach them what his grandfather had taught him: toughness and determination, to be physically brave and physically fit and never to allow themselves to be pushed around, or just because they knew how to use their brains, to be defamed as Jewish weaklings and sissies” (Roth, P.28). As you can see here, both characters has received vital information passed down from one generation to another. Therefore, their personal responsibility of face challenges should never be …show more content…

During Bucky’s time there, he developed another relationship with boy who similar to Alan Michaels but five years older. This kid name was Donald Kaplow. As he and Bucky relationship grew, he wanted Bucky to teach him how to perfect his strokes better. They both would enjoy their time at the docks as Bucky candidly teaching Donald springboard dives. As instructed by Mr Blomblack “We have two goals at the waterfront: to teach our youngsters water skills and to teach our youngsters water safety” (Roth,p.148). As you can see, personal responsibility of the youngsters were already a set standard here at Indian Hills. Only thing Bucky had to do was mirror that and actively demonstrate it. Most of the kids liked Bucky Cantor. He seemed open to all and that made it easier for kids to gravitate to him. Even at his time back in Newark the adults even looked up to him. They all asked him about the epidemic of polio and were there ways for it to be stopped. Such a young age, Bucky appeared to be the man with the plan. It seems as if his outgoing persona and knowledge made him

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