preview

The Role Of Kites In 'The Kite Runner'

Decent Essays

“Hope is knowing that people, like kites, are made to be lifted up” (ARO). Kites play a large role in the book The Kite Runner and in the Afghanistan Relief Organization. Kites are similar to people and symbolize being uplifted and emerging from our problems. In the book The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, this is reflected at the end of the story where Sohrab lifts Amir from his sins. The end applies to the statement given by the Afghanistan Relief Organization and how they’re both connected. Expanding on the link between the ARO’s quote and the ending of The Kite Runner, it is mentioned that Sohrab smiles gesturing that he feels hope for his future rather than loathing the situation that he’s currently in. “One corner of his mouth had curled up just so. A smile” (Hosseini 370). This quote reveals that although it is not the life Sohrab had lived nor hoped to live, this moment where he is flying a kite with Amir has given him hope for what he will face in America. “I ran with the wind blowing in my face,and a smile as wide as the Valley of Panjsher on my lips” (Hosseini 371). The quote recited shows how after he had amended his sins, he has risen and is now filled with happiness and hopefulness for his future with Sohrab. Amir is once again at peace as he was before Hassan’s rape. In other words, the kites correlate to how Amir and Sohrab have flown above their problems and have been given this newly found sense of hope. Furthermore, Amir’s first turning point, the winter

Get Access