Three Cups Of Tea Analysis

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Imagine millions of Afghani refugees, emaciated families, and thousands of uneducated children all desperate for help. In the war that America has waged against terror, it has left in its wake millions of peaceful, starving, and struggling civilians. Both, Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin and The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini display the two different stories about the reality of living in the midst of war. Using contrasting brushstrokes, these two stories paint a vivid picture of the fragile and tumultuous society that millions of peaceful Afghani and Pakistani civilians claim as their own. The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini is an album of snapshots into the tumultuous culture of Soviet and Taliban struggling for …show more content…

Three Cups of Tea, is the fascinating tale of one man’s mountaineering failure, turned to a mission of peace through education. The story of Greg Mortenson, told by David Oliver Relin, begins with a failed scaling of the world’s second highest mountain, K2. Mortenson stumbles upon the tiny, impoverished Pakistani village of Korphe, where the residents nurse him back to health after weeks in high elevation. Disturbed by the lack of basic necessities, access to modern civilization, and education, Mortenson is determined to repay their kindness by building Korphe a school. Three Cups of Tea, gets its title from the practice of drinking enormous amounts of tea to conduct any sort of business in Pakistan and Afghanistan. The continuum of the story describes Mortenson’s fight against radical terrorism by building 55 schools to provide an alternative education to combat the indoctrination by madrassa (publicly funded militant jihad education) schools. Mortenson’s philosophy was to build as many schools as possible to provide a non-radical educational alternative for parents to send both boys and girls. By empowering a generation of village women through education, Mortenson believed he could change the …show more content…

The entire path of Mortenson’s life took a dramatic shift when he stumbled into Korphe. This was just one of many hardships that Mortenson persevered through, and used as an opportunity instead of a hinderance. Amazingly, Mortenson succeeded because of his numerous mistakes. An example of his mistakes, would include his numerous blunders against Pakistani custom. Throughout Mortenson’s story, he encounters numerous unique cultural precedents. He learns that in order to earn respect from those he was trying to help, he had to learn to understand their customs. Finally, in spending so much time among rural, isolated, and impoverished Pakistani villages, Mortenson discovered the way to combat terrorism. Mortenson understood that in order to pull these rural villages out of poverty, the parents needed access to education. The only remotely affordable education available to poverty-stricken farmers was madrassa. The madrassa system provided economically cheap education, but it came at a great price. Madrassa is funded by jihadi cells who use this opportunity to instill hatred and jihad into rural children who have not learned contrary. This system also encouraged excluding women from education, and freedom in general. Mortenson strongly believed that by providing a moderate and unbiased education for girls and boys was the only way to keep

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