The Kite Runner… week #3
After
the rape, Amir and Hassan spend less time together. Baba and Amir take a trip
to Jalalabad and stay at the house of Baba’s cousin. When they arrive they have
a large traditional Afghan dinner. Baba proudly tells everyone about the kite
tournament (Baba finally makes Amir feel his love but in the wrong time), but
Amir does not enjoy it. After dinner, they all lie down to bed in the same
room, but Amir cannot sleep. He says aloud that he watched Hassan get raped,
but nobody is awake to hear him. He says this is the night he became an insomniac.
When Amir and Baba return home, Hassan asks Amir if he wants to walk up the
hill with him. They walk in silence, and when Hassan asks if Amir will read to
him, Amir changes his mind and wants to go home. Amir suddenly changed towards
Hassan.
After
that the boys avoid each other that one day, Amir asks Baba if he would ever
get new servants. Baba becomes really “furious” and says that he will never
replace Ali and Hassan. With the start of school,
Amir spends hours alone in his room. One afternoon he asks Hassan to walk up
the hill with him so he can read him a story. They sit under a pomegranate
tree, and Amir asks Hassan what he would do if he threw a pomegranate at him go.
Amir begins pelting Hassan with pomegranates and yells at Hassan to hit him
back. But Hassan won’t. He crushes a pomegranate against his own forehead, asks
Amir if he is satisfied, and leaves.
When
Amir turns 13 in 1976, Baba invites more than 400 people to the party he plans.
At the party Baba makes Amir greet each guest personally. Assef arrives and
acts politely as he jokes with Baba. He tells Amir that he chose the gift
himself. Amir cannot hide his discomfort, embarrassing Baba and forcing him to apologize.
Once Amir is alone he opens the gift, a biography of Hitler, which he throws
away.
As
Amir sits in the dark, Rahim Khan shows up and starts chatting with him,
sharing that he was almost married once. The girl was a Hazara. They would meet
secretly at night and imagine a life together. But when Rahim Khan told his
father, his father became enraged and sent the girl and her family away. Rahim
Khan says it was for the best. His family’s rejection of her would have been
too painful in the long run. He tells Amir he is always there to listen, then
gives him a leather-bound notebook for his stories. Fireworks begin, and the
two rush back to the house, where Amir sees Hassan serving drinks to Assef and
Wali.
The
next morning Amir opens his presents. He thinks to himself that either he or
Hassan must leave. As he is going out later, Ali stops him and gives him his
present. It is a new version of “Shahnamah,” the book of stories Amir would
read to Hassan. The morning after, Amir waits for Hassan and Ali to leave. He
takes his birthday money and a watch that Baba gave him and puts them under
Hassan’s mattress. He tells Baba that Hassan stole them, and when Ali and
Hassan return, Baba asks Hassan if he stole the money and the watch. To Amir’s
surprise, Hassan says he did. Amir realizes Hassan saw him in the alley, and he
knew also that Amir was setting him up now. Baba forgives Hassan, but Ali says
they must leave. Baba pleads with him to stay, but Ali refuses. It rains when
Ali and Hassan leave, and Amir watches from inside as they go…
Most notably, Amir allowed
Hassan to be raped in part because he thought bringing home the kite would win
him Baba’s love, relieving him of his guilt over his mother’s death and making
him happy. To some degree he is correct, at least initially. Baba spends more of his time
with him, invites him out to a movie when it was always Amir who had to ask,
brags about his victory in the kite tournament, and organizes a large party for
his birthday. But Amir is unable to fully enjoy it. He is so consumed by a
different guilt—guilt over his inaction during Hassan’s rape—that he is
constantly miserable that he couldn’t hide his discomfort towards Assef in
front of Baba. Also when he asks Baba if he would ever consider new servants,
Baba is so upset he tells Amir that he is ashamed of him. The similar event
occurs at Amir’s birthday party, when Baba is embarrassed by Amir’s rudeness
toward Assef. In other words, Amir’s guilt leads him to do things that result
in a loss of Baba’s approval. Rather than gain everything he wants, Amir loses
the happiness he had.
Amir
does not know how to deal with his feelings of guilt and unhappiness after
Hassan’s rape. At first he tries to keep away from Hassan, who becomes a
constant reminder to Amir of his own cowardice and selfishness. He seems to
think avoiding Hassan means he won’t feel these things any longer. But Hassan
is a part of the household, so Amir can never escape him completely. When the
two are face-to-face, Amir wishes Hassan would punish him. He pelts Hassan with
the pomegranates, for instance, because he wants Hassan to hit him back.
OBVIOUS..!!
Punishment,
Amir feels, would at least begin to make up for the way he wronged Hassan.
Hassan, however, will not retaliate, and this becomes the greatest torment for
Amir. Hassan proves his love and loyalty to Amir are unshakable, whereas Amir
proves that his love and loyalty are weak. One of Amir’s constant fears is
realized: Hassan emerges as the stronger, better person. Amir cannot tolerate
this truth and engineers a plan to make Ali and Hassan leave. Yet his guilt is
only heightened when Hassan admits to stealing the money and watch. Amir
recognizes that Hassan is sacrificing himself again, despite knowing that Amir
did not do the same for him when he was been bulied…
There
are also more examples in this section of the injustices against Hazaras. When
Rahim Khan’s father becomes angry because Rahim Khan wants to marry a Hazara
woman, he resolves the problem not by moving his own family, but by sending
away the Hazara woman and her family. Similarly, to resolve the tension between
Hassan and Amir, Ali decides that they will leave. Both the Hazara family from
Rahim Khan’s story and Ali and Hassan go to Hazarajat, an isolated, mountainous
region in central Afghanistan that is principally inhabited by Hazaras. But
perhaps the most poignant image of the injustice toward Hazaras is the moment
Amir witnesses Hassan serving drinks to Assef and Wali from a silver platter.
Hassan cannot do anything about the rape because of his inferior status as a
poor Hazara, and Assef, whose family is rich and powerful, knows it. Hassan
dutifully serves Assef, the boy who BULLIED him, and Assef expresses no remorse
or shame during the encounter. Instead, he grins at Hassan and kneads him in
the chest tauntingly with his knuckle.>>
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