What was hassan mother name
His character arc takes him from being a normal little boy to the traumatized victim of sexual and physical abuse, and he goes from speaking very little to not at all. Assef represents all things wrong in Afghanistan. A racist who wishes to rid Afghanistan of Hazaras, he is incapable of remorse and enjoys inflicting violence and sexual abuse on those who are powerless. He even claims Hitler as a role model. Friend of Baba and Amir. A former mujahedin fighter, Farid is at first gruff and unfriendly.
He is missing toes and fingers from a landmine explosion and represents the difficulties that many Afghans faced in the years of warfare that ravaged the country.
Though Sanaubar is infamously immoral in her youth and abandons Hassan just after he is born, she proves herself a caring grandmother to Sohrab when she reappears later in the novel. Soraya is steady, intelligent, and always there for Amir when he needs her. She can be strong-willed like her father, General Taheri, and deplores the way women are often treated in Afghan culture. General Taheri is proud to the point of arrogance at times, and he places great value on upholding Afghan traditions.
He is in many ways the stereotypical Afghan male, both in his roles as a father and husband. Jamila plays the part of the typical Afghan wife and mother. She obeys her husband without question and wants nothing more than to see her daughter married. Cowardly and conformist, Kamal helps Assef rape Hassan. After he is raped himself, he becomes a symbol of the brutality that destroys Afghanistan.
Later, however, he becomes instrumental in helping to get Sohrab into the United States. I know that in the end, God will forgive. He will forgive your father, me, and you too. God will forgive. I hope you can do the same. Forgive your father if you can. Forgive me if you wish. But, most important, forgive yourself. I have left you some money, most of what I have left, in fact. I think you may have some expenses when you return here, and the money should be enough to cover them.
There is a bank in Peshawar; Farid knows the location. The money is in a safe-deposit box. I have given you the key. As for me, it is time to go. I have little time left and I wish to spend it alone. Please do not look for me. That is my final request of you. Amir — The protagonist and narrator of the novel, Amir is a wealthy boy who grows up in Kabul, Afghanistan with a sense of entitlement.
Amir manipulates his privileged upbringing over his servant and loyal best friend, Hassan , whose aid he fails to come to when Hassan is being raped by older boys after a kite -fighting tournament. After Hassan is raped, the book focuses on Amir being driven by his feelings of guilt, his personal growth as he and Baba move to the U.
Throughout the novel, his character ultimately changes from him being a selfish child to a selfless adult. He eventually marries Soraya, who cannot birth children, and they adopt Hassan's son, Sohrab. Baba — Father of Amir and also secretly to Hassan, Baba is a larger-than-life figure who works hard and doesn't let anyone's doubts stop him from accomplishing his goals, but stands by his own strict moral principles and is often tough on Amir.
Baba goes from a wealthy and well-respected, but unhappy, businessman in Afghanistan to a much happier gas station worker making little money in America.
Hassan is an excellent kite runner, and is naturally intelligent, but because of his social class as a poor ethnic Hazara, is illiterate and seen as inferior in Afghan society. He becomes the victim of racism, rape, oppression, and murder over the course of his relatively short life, yet always remains loyal, forgiving, and good natured especially to Amir throughout the novel.
Although he is not present for a majority of the novel, Hassan's plays a major role in the character development of Amir, Baba, and even Sohrab. He is the only one who knows all of Baba's secrets about his affair with Sanaubar and about Hassan.
Sohrab — Son of Hassan and Farzana. For Amir, Sohrab serves as a means for Amir to atone for what happened between him and Hassan. Later on in the novel, he becomes the central focus of the plot as Amir seeks redemption by eventually adopting Sohrab.
He is also an ethnic Hazara and is great with a slingshot, just like his father. Ali — One of Baba's loyal servants, Ali also acts as the "father" to Hassan. He loves Hassan, but he rarely openly expresses his emotions. Ali also walks with a limp. The neighborhood kids chase Ali around and call him Babalu or "Boogeyman. We hear more about an emerging tension: ethnicity.
Looking through his mother's old history books, Amir discovers the inequality between the two ethnicities. Pashtuns are the privileged majority.
We learn Sanaubar taunted Ali along with the neighborhood kids. But Ali doesn't feel the need to fight back against his assailants. He loves Hassan so much it doesn't bother him. Little story from the midwife as told to the neighbor's servant: when Hassan was born with a cleft lip , Sanaubar said to Ali: "Now you have your own idiot child to do all your smiling for you! Amir tells us he and Hassan had the same wet nurse because Sanaubar left Ali and Amir's mother passed away in childbirth.
Farid The taxi driver who takes Amir back to Afghanistan. Farid initially judges Amir as a traitor who abandoned Afghanistan, but after he learns of the real reason for Amir's return, Farid helps him. Raymond Andrews The official at the U. Embassy in Pakistan who makes Amir realize the difficulties he will encounter if he attempts to adopt Sohrab.
Kamal A childhood follower of Assef. Kamal dies when attempting to escape Afghanistan in a fuel truck.
0コメント