Dear Amir‚ Living in this Pashtun society throughout my lifetime has been horrific. I feel mentally challenged encountering obstacles day by day. It has been mental tribulation and misery throughout this time period for being segregated as a Hazara from the Pashtuns. I mean no iniquity to anybody‚ yet I am discriminated and hated in this society for my beliefs. It is not just about me‚ but it involves the people of my kind. Although we did have an uprising in the early nineteenth century‚
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Ahmad Abdullhadi Shalabi World Literature December 10th‚ 2013 The Quest for Identity in Sherman Alexie’s “What You Pawn I Will Redeem” Sherman Alexie‚ a Spokane/Coeur d ’Alene Indian‚ was born in 1966 on the Spokane Indian Reservation in Wellpinit‚ Washington.” [He] is a poet‚ writer‚ and filmmaker. Much of his writing draws on his experiences as a Native American growing up on the Spokane Indian Reservation” ( Konigsberg). As a Native American‚ Alexie’s main concern is presenting his own culture
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central character‚ Amir‚ narrates his personal journey from childhood to present-day adulthood. As a child‚ Amir is a member of a privileged Kabul upper class‚ until the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in 1978. Throughout the text‚ Amir experiences events that both cause his powerful and conflicting emotions and reveal his flaws and sins. It is his honest and heartfelt response to his wrongdoing that draws a positive connection from the reader. Although his sins are indeed grievous‚ Amir nevertheless remains
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Holding Amir accountable would be the first thing that most people do‚ thus making him look like a selfish child that is just a coward. However‚ when the audience or reader takes a deeper look into his life’s story and background‚ sympathy starts to pour out like a waterfall. Then a level ground is found; how can the reader hold this poor boy responsible for his troubled past? Amir has lived through severe and tragic events‚ some of which occurred during his childhood; most of these will never be
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A Critical Analysis of “What you pawn I will redeem” I really enjoyed the story “What you pawn I will redeem” by Sherman Alexie. What made it so enjoyable for me‚ was not only Jackson who is the main character but also the friends and cousins which were mentioned throughout this story. This story had great characters and a very great story line. Thanks to the main character I got to experience firsthand what it like is to be‚ not only homeless‚ but also an alcoholic. During this entire story I felt
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Amir takes actions that seem bad because his entire life he had to deal with emotional and physical abuse. In the kite runner Amir is projected as a bad guy because of how he treats Hassan throughout the book. Amir isn’t a bad guy because his actions were done when he was young‚ full of jealousy‚ and rejected. People can overlook it because these feelings are relatable. Amir does these immoral action because he believes that it will make his life easier. He tries to see his action as solutions to
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“What You Pawn I Will Redeem” is the story of homeless financially strapped Spokane Indian man named Jackson Jackson faced with the task of coming up with nearly one thousand dollars in twenty-four hours in order to reclaim his grandmother’s stolen regalia from a pawn shop. On the way to raise money‚ he meets with generosity‚ compassion‚ kindness‚ sympathy. “What You Pawn I Will Redeem” is a story of generosity. At the beginning of the story‚ Jackson passes by a pawn shop and sees a regalia that
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# 11 Never Judge a Book by It’s Cover Amir and Baba are completely deceived by each other’s looks. Baba always stood up for himself‚ and loved playing soccer; Amir on the other hand hates soccer‚ and is a coward. Amir and Baba don’t know that they really have a lot in common. The main similarity they share is guilt. Baba always had to live with the guilt that he cannot treat Hassan as his own child‚ because Baba made love to Ali’s wife. Amir has to live with the guilt of not aiding Hassan
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the novel‚ Amir and Hassan have a very close brotherly relationship when they are alone. Amir is afraid to be Hassan’s true friend in public because they are from two different social classes (Amir being a Pashtun and Hassan being a Hazara). Hazaras are thought of to be lower class and should not be fraternizing with upper class Pashtuns. Amir tests Hassan’s loyalty and resents Hassan because he is secretly jealous of him. Baba is always treating Hassan like a more favored son than Amir even though
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truth of every relationship‚ even between those who love each other‚ like fathers and sons and daughters‚ or husbands and wives‚ is that the love is always unequal.” In The Kite Runner‚ Amir‚ the protagonist‚ life changes tremendously and is displayed through relationships‚ events‚ and character development. As Amir matures‚ he witnesses and experiences many things things most young men don’t typically encounter. Amir’s mother died when he was just a boy and he does not have a personal connection with
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