He has to find the way to earn forgiveness for himself and gain back some of his respect as a human being. He has too choose whether to continue being a coward like he was in the alley or stand up and take responsibility for his betrayal. In the second quote Hassan gives another example of hiss undying loyalty towards Amir and their relationship as more of brothers than master and servant. Amir does not give the same amount of respect or trust to Hassan even though Amir repeatedly betrays Hassan and breaks their relationship. He lives in his adult life reliving his mistakes towards Amir in his old homeland and had wished he wasn’t such a coward and stood beside Hassan as he did for…
Amir wants to please his father because Amir would like to be a son Baba can be proud of. Baba loves his son yet he still wants Amir to be a “little Baba” because Amir doesn't stand up for himself and doesn't act as Baba would. Amir knows this and tries to be more like his father. Baba is seen as “the perfect man” because of his successfulness, strength, and personality or character. The community sees Baba this way because he is so willing to sacrifice himself for others and they have even made fables about Baba’s strength by fighting a bear and Amir views his father in the same way; as seen in the dreams Amir has and how he describes his father. Amir tries to make Baba proud of him through trying soccer but is short lived because he isn't…
Within the story The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, their are several qualities of the characters that are discovered by the audience. This help readers understand the relationships these characters have with one another. The relationship between Amir and Hassan is quite different than the ideal friendship individuals see in today’s society. While Amir is a Pashtun, Hassan is Hazara which is not as accepted in their society, since the majority is Pashtun. Throughout the novel, readers learn more about how their religious differences separate and change their friendship.…
Baba says these words to Rahim Khan while he is talking about Amir at the end of Chapter 3, and the quotation reveals important traits in both Amir and Baba. With these words, Baba sums up one of Amir’s major character flaws—his cowardice—and Baba shows how much value he places in standing up for what is right. Baba is reluctant to praise Amir, largely because he feels Amir lacks the courage to even stand up for himself, leaving Amir constantly craving Baba’s approval. Amir’s desire for this approval as well as his cowardice later cause him to let Assef rape Hassan. The quotation also foreshadows the major test of Amir’s character that occurs when he must decide whether to return to Kabul to save Sohrab. As Amir searches for redemption, the question he struggles with is precisely what concerned Baba: does he have the courage and strength to stand up for what is right?…
During the annual kite tournament, Amir witnessed his brother, Hassan being brutally beaten and raped by Assef: he did not say a word. Instead of standing up for his brother, Amir kept quiet while he stood and watched in horror. “I opened my mouth, almost said something. Almost. The rest of my life might have turned out differently if I had. But I didn’t.…
He is selfish, demanding, cowardly, disrespectful and jealous. He does not seem like the type of person that will do something for another out of the kindness of their heart. He always thinks about himself and what he wants. He has never sacrificed anything for the people he loves. Growing up with the memory of Hassan’s rape still fresh in his mind like a situation that has just unfolded has finally opened his eyes and makes him realize he needs to be brave for once in his life. So Amir acts. He goes back to Afghanistan to find Hassan’s son, Sohrab. Rahim Khan’s advice, “There is a way to be good again” (pg.2) helps Amir to put his feelings into action. Assef, now a Taliban officer, beats Amir up badly, but this, heals Amir of his wrong doings from the past and he takes Sohrab back to America with him to live a good life. Amir finally puts someone before himself after all the sacrifices Hassan has made for him in the past. This shows the love and sacrifice he makes for Hassan’s child knowing it is the only way he can ever repay Hassan for the years of mistreatment in their…
At the beginning of the novel, Amir is a young selfish child who cares about himself and only himself, which is evident by the choices he makes. His obsession to please Baba, his father, causes him to betray his best friend, later known to be his half-brother, Hassan. Hassan was raped by Assef, the novel’s antagonist, because he was protecting the kite Amir yearned for to satisfy Baba. Amir later confesses, “Maybe Hassan was the price I had to pay, the lamb I had to slay, to win Baba” (Hosseini 7). As a consequence, Amir lives with an abundant amount of guilt, in which he tries to avoid, but as the years crawl by, he is unable to find tranquility. His guilty conscious troubles…
When Amir brakes his promise to Sorab he tryed to cut his wrists in a suiside attempt and Amir is horrified at what Sorab has done that and he tells Sorab that when the ambulance carried him away he was still screaming. This tells us that the key to Amir’s redemption lies with Sorab Surviving and making it out of…
Amir resembles Baba because he too takes up redemption for the awful things he did. He understands the great danger Sohrab is in. He risks his life to help Sohrab; this shows loyalty to Hassan. Even though Sohrab is not Hassan sa his son shows that Amir is loyal to him. He would do anything for Hassan to make up for his childhood. After finding Sohrab, Amir comes face to face with Assef, Hassan's rapist. “Another rib snapped, this time lower. What was so funny was that, for the first time since the winter of 1975, I felt at peace. I laughed because I saw that, in some hidden nook in the corner of my mind, I’d even been looking forward to this… My body was broken – just how badly I wouldn’t find out until later – but I felt healed” (Hosseini 289) This scene depicts the acceptance that Amir finally faces. He starts coming to terms with his past because he feels at peace over the fact that he is finally getting justice for Hassan. That he is brave enough not to run away just as Hassan would stay to fight. Amir sacrifices everything for Sohrab just as Hassan did for him once. Amir finally shows the love for Hassan that was given to…
Before Amir did those things to Hassan, he didn’t consider the consequence, the only thing he care is his Baba’s love. However, after Hassan leaved his home, Amir afraid face the things that related to Hassan, he didn’t realize the truth that the feeling is that come from his guilt of Hassan. For example: “I ended up tossing the book on the heap of gifts in the corner of my room. But my eyes kept going back to it, so I buried it at the bottom.” (Pg 100) Amir really knows what will he do to Hassan, he refuse to accept the things from Hassan, included the memory with him. Finally Amir makes Hassan leave from his Baba without guilt in his mind. However, with the time goes by, Amir gradually becomes more and more mature, he realized his wrong on Hassan and wanted redeem himself, for instance, Amir said: “But how could I pack up and go back home when my actions may have cost Hassan a chance at those same things?”(Pg 238) Amir was struggling with his past because the things he did to Hassan, he wanted redeem himself, finally the guilt forced him to go back home. When he during the journey that go back to pick Hassan’s child, he met Assef and fought with him, Amir said that “My body was broken-just how badly I wouldn’t find out until later-but I felt healed. Healed at last. I laughed.” (Pg 303). According to this quote, Amir felt healed because he thought it was a redemption, he wanted punish his cowardice and forced himself to face Assef. The guilt just like a nightmare which Amir wants to refuse and forgo it, he finally get a way to figure out…
Bearing Hassan’s loyalty in mind, we can look more closely at Amir. The following exchange between Amir and Hassan is important, because it prepares us for future events and shows a more cruel side of Amir.…
Amir was a tortured soul because he was ashamed of what he did in his past, in his childhood. Amir thinks that the god will never forgive him, but most importantly Amir will never forgive himself. Amir watched Hassan get beat up by Assef and his friends. Amir never thought to go up to Hassan and help him. Amir wanted Hassan to suffer so he can have Baba all to himself. Amir could never handle the fact that Baba loved Hassan more than he loved him. Amir put handful of money and a wrist watch under Hassan’s bed to frame Hassan of stealing. Hassan took the fall and Hassan and Ali had to leave the house. Years later Amir finds out that Hassan was his half-brother, and realizes that his life had been a lie right from the start. Amir couldn’t imagine what he had done to Hassan was to his own brother. Amir thought that Hassan would’ve been alive if it weren’t for him, and thought about how he treated him for all those years. Rahim Khan says to Amir that, what you did in the past was because you were a troubled child. Amir has a chance to do the right thing, with Sohrab, and make him little less miserable and stop being hard on himself for once in his life.…
Hassan is able to forgive the people who turned their backs on him. Amir let Hassan get a punishment for defending him. Amir finds out many years later that Hassan knew Amir was in that alleyway that night, yet Hasson still tries to reach Amir for years and wrote letters. Which Hassan knew there was a slim chances of it ever reaching Amir, “show me how to reach the unreachable.” Also Hasson’s mother shows up. Hassan’s mother left the moment Hassan was born and never even held him. Yet Hassan forgave his mother, and, “ loved the unlovable.” “She was home now, he said, home with her family,” (Hosseini 210). Despite everything people did to Hassan he was still able to forgive. Which is a gift Hassan has for himself and also gives to others.…
Amir, at the beginning of the story was selfish and didn’t care about the wellbeing of others. He was starved for Baba’s affection and was deprived of it mainly because he was blamed for the death of his own mother. He felt a lot of guilt for his mother’s death and blamed himself. He really believed that he had killed his own mother, and that that was why his father hated him, “I always felt like Baba hated me a little. And why not? After all, I had killed his beloved wife, his beautiful princess, hadn't I?” (Hosseini 17) He didn’t get the attention from his father, Baba, so whenever Hassan is even noticed by Baba, Amir became very jealous. Amir never stood up for himself and allowed Hassan to stand up for him. This worried Baba, he felt that, “A boy who won’t stand up for himself becomes a man who can’t stand up to anything.” (PAGE NUMBER) Amir thinks primarily about himself and what will happen to him. He feels that he doesn’t live up to his father expectations because he would rather bury his face in a book than play soccer. He is even horrified when at his birthday party Assef converses with Baba about soccer. Amir’s progression in the story made him a more mature and all around better person.…
After years of misguidance, Amir realizes that on the road to friendship and loyalty, one must be able to stand up for what they believe in, something many are too afraid to do. When they were young, Amir and Hassan, Amir's slave, were confronted by the neighborhood bully, Assef. They happened to be in a remote location. Afraid of being hurt, Amir wondered if anyone would be able to hear his scream. “'Just let us go Assef,' I said, hating the way my voice trembled”(Hosseini 41). If not for the lethal threat of Hassan's slingshot, Assef might not have left without giving them a beating. This event portrays one of Amir's weaknesses, which contrasts his adult persona. It shows how he thinks about himself in situations that threaten his well being. A strong person would not have assumed that the only option was to admit defeat. Hassan managed to put aside his fears to overcome Assef's superiority; which was the opposite of Amir. Amir's weakness did not go unnoticed in his daily life. Baba, Amir's father, was able to see this in him: “A boy who can't stand up for himself becomes a man who can't stand up for anything”(22). Baba's statement is not so much of a fact as it is a challenge. He does not believe that Amir will ever change, but there is never a way to be absolutely sure of what the future holds. The encounter with Assef was only a stepping stone on the road to learning what it means to be a true friend. Amir…