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Theme Of Betrayal In The Kite Runner

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The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini is a heart racing, an emotional, and a painfully beautiful book. Everything seems as perfect as can be like a kite floating in the steady air. Two boys, Amir and Hassan, different in social classes, but the same in heart and ethnicity live their lives as young boys do. As young boys, they are oblivious to the traumatic events that occur, and are afraid of the consequences that would follow. People say time heals, but for this two, time had strapped them on a kite for a flight of a life time with many ups and downs. The Kite Runner is filled with many themes that reoccur throughout the book, such as: betray a friend and you betray yourself, no matter what happens love will prevail all, and ethnic tension does not affect one minority, but everyone as a whole. These powerful themes make the book a never ending emotional roller coaster. One of the major themes in The Kite Runner is betrayal. Betrayal reoccurs throughout the book during multiple occasions within different characters. Hassan, Amir’s servant and friend, serves and defends Amir in several ways, and even says to Amir, “For you, a thousand times over” (Hosseini 167). While Hassan is molested by Assef, Amir becomes a bystander and watches the incident happening from a far, and by doing this he was betraying Hassan with his cowardliness. Not only did Amir betray Hassan, but Baba had betrayed his friend, Ali, as well. Baba who seems to be the definition of a perfect man is not so

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