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The Kite Runner: A Stirring Tale of Redemption

By Laura Flanders, AlterNet. Posted December 15, 2007.


Khaled Hosseini's moving novel and film hits on all the right themes for a tale about the West and Afghanistan.

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Within the first five minutes of the newly released film The Kite Runner, the leitmotif is laid out in a Karachi-to-California telephone call. Come home to Afghanistan, the protagonist, a young writer "Amir" is told by an ailing uncle. It won't be an easy journey, the uncle explains, but it's not too late: "There is a way to be good again."

At the level of metaphor, the film adaptation of Khaled Hosseini's best-selling novel is right on target. Abuse of power, remorse, shame, grief, guilt and the dream of redemption: They're exactly the right emotions to stir in a movie about the United States and Afghanistan. The Kite Runner is a tear-jerker for the politically conscious. Unfortunately, when it comes to real-life U.S.-Afghan relations, the metaphors hit more bases than what's actually on the screen.

Scripted by David Benioff (Troy) and directed by Marc Forster (Monster's Ball), the Kite Runner mostly follows the narrative of Hosseini's surprise hit, published in 2001. In 1970s Afghanistan, a wealthy widower's son, "Amir," romps through lush, cosmopolitan Kabul with his best (perhaps only) friend "Hassan," the family servant's son.

Clouds are gathering, of course, over the boys and their country. Afghanistan is slipping from a modern secular state into an internationally fuelled civil war. The elegant city of Amir's affluent father "Baba" is crumbling. (Playing the aristocrat turned gas station attendant, "Baba," Iranian Homayoun Ershadi turns in the standout performance of the film.) As ethnic tensions are stoked, loyal Hassan is brutally attacked by a gang of bullies while young Amir watches and does nothing. Soon afterwards, the Soviets invade Afghanistan, and the world does the same.

Hosseini has said that his story is about global indifference, "It foretells what happens to Afghanistan in the ensuing decade after the Soviet invasion. Afghanistan like Hassan, served a purpose. And once that purpose has been served, it is abandoned and brutalized and people just stand around and watch."

The symbolism is obvious. Hassan is loyal, adoring, obedient to a fault. He tells his master/friend Amir that he'd eat dirt if asked. Used, victimized and abandoned, Hassan is a transparent stand-in for Afghanistan, the buffer state brutalized in successive "Great Games" -- first between the Russian and British, and then the Soviet and U.S. empires.

There's just one glitch. Neither the Americans nor the British make an appearance. Religious zealots inexplicably emerge, cruel counterparts to cruel communists. Secular Kabul's caught in between. "The Mullahs want to control our souls. The communists say we have no souls," says Baba. There's no third player in this tale. There's no covert U.S. assistance to rebel Mujahadeen, for example, no paying of bullies to serve the Cold War.

We know from President Carter's advisor Zbigniew Brzezinkski that the official version of Afghan history is hokum. U.S. intervention didn't follow the Soviet Army's invasion, it preceded it. In a 1998 interview with Le Nouvel Observateur, Brzezinski recalled:

We didn't push the Russians to intervene, but we knowingly increased the probability that they would ... That secret operation was an excellent idea. It had the effect of drawing the Soviets into the Afghan trap ... The day that the Soviets officially crossed the border, I wrote to President Carter. We now have the opportunity of giving to the Soviet Union its Vietnam War.

The only "American" in The Kite Runner is Amir, the guilt-ridden refugee who does as his uncle tells him. He goes to Afghanistan, performs an act of rescue and returns home redeemed. He gains his "manhood" while he's about it, proving he's not quite the pushover his father feared him to be.

Redemption for the United States will come harder.

In November 2001, Laura Bush promised rescue. "Our hearts break for the women and children in Afghanistan," she told the world in the middle of her husband's post 9-11 bombing campaign. "The fight against terrorism is a fight for the rights and dignity of women," said the First Lady. The U.S. Air Force was dropping 15,000-pound "daisy cutter" bombs on medieval Afghanistan at the time. Hillary Rodham Clinton wrote in Time Magazine: "We, as the liberators, have an interest in what follows the Taliban."

Ironically, or perhaps not so ironically, the talented child actors in The Kite Runner are now living in exile in the United Arab Emirates after their guardians voiced anxieties that they could be ostracized or targeted by ethnic and religious extremists. In the real world, what's "followed" the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan are more heavily armed warlords, more theocracy and more Taliban.

Some will say it's unfair to hold the movie of a novel to task for repeating the propaganda version of U.S. history, but the myth of the United States as macho rescuer is not only misleading, it's deadly -- for people in Afghanistan and around the world. Shed all the tears you like as you're watching, but don't leave the remorse in the cinema. Try as it might, Hollywood can't purge our guilt, or dissuade us of the need to act.

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See more stories tagged with: the kite runner, occupation, afghanistan, marc forster

Laura Flanders is author of Bushwomen: Tales of a Cynical Species.

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View:
Our War against Afganistan
Posted by: larrycraig on Dec 15, 2007 5:54 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read the book recently and loved it knowing full well it was in total extremely effective pro U. S. government propaganda. It may well get the Nobel for lit for the same reason Gulag Archipelago garnered the prize but I believe it is far superior to Solzanetson's winner. The quote at the end of the article above by Zbigniew Berzinski was enlightening. It is easy to forget the disaster that passed for foreign policy under Carter because he has been doing such a good job of redeeming himself since leaving office.

Anyone interested in more info on this terrible history would do well to read CHARLIE WILSON'S WAR which is about the liberal Texas Dem who pushed successfully for ever increasing funding for the war against Afganistan during Reagan's reign of terror. Liberals in congress insisted on funding the terroists there and providing them with the advanced weapons which finally chased out the Soviets leaving the progressive secular Afgan gov to fall to our terrorists and then the Taliban.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

William Middlemas
Posted by: wmiddlemas on Dec 15, 2007 6:43 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Kite Runner is not meant to be a polictical statement. It is a statement about a person who betrays a friend and seeks personal redemption.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: William Middlemas Posted by: drmimi94954
» RE: William Middlemas Posted by: Salty_Dog
Skinned Alive and Half Dead by Age Five
Posted by: lc on Dec 15, 2007 9:02 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I drove to Kabul in a 67 VW camper back in 1972 when Kabul was at its 20th century high. I drove through capital cities from South America to Asia and none compare to Kabul which is anything but "cosmopolitan" unless compared to its 12 century surroundings. Kabul has always been the stomping grounds for Empires east to west and back again.
Afghanistan is one of the most primitive places on earth but no Imperial power has ever lasted there. The Empire of the British Raj abandoned Kabul with 17,000 civilians and military who were all slaughtered two passes up from the Khybir Pass. The Afghans allowed one lieutenant to survive and he fled to Delhi to tell his horror story where the bones of 17,000 people from the Gent Isles lay many feet deep for a century after.
Carry that forward to the 1978 Russian invasion when the Mujaheden videotaped the skinning of alive Russian soldiers to send back to their family in Russia.
The Afghans did the same to four western journalists captured during the US invasion in northern Afghanistan: they skinned them alive and sent the video tapes to be censored by western media so that most of US do not know how bad it really is in Afghanistan.
Those hippie days of late 60's and early 70's Afghanistan when only half the children died before the age of five, sad to say, were the good old days compared to today when the US of A is the Empire du jour.
IM
Belteshazzar

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Fact-check.
Posted by: kutastha on Dec 15, 2007 9:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hosseini's Kite Runner was set in a certain time period, from before the Russian invasion of Afghanistan through to the rise of the Taliban. The novel does not take place during or after 9/11, so any omission of the American invasion and occupation of Afghanistan is not really relevant. Of course, there are many reasons to be seriously critical and concerned about America's use of military power there and elsewhere, past and present, but these criticisms of Hosseini's story and its adaptation to film are not really accurate.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» thank you Posted by: DCBeltway
I saw the movie, haven't read the book
Posted by: chaoslegs on Dec 15, 2007 11:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was lucky enough to see a free screening in November.

While the film did cover the time period prior to the Soviet Invasion, that time period focused mostly on the children. The father and uncle did get in to political discussions, and the father clearly did not like the mullahs or communists, it might is quite a stretch for him to know secret US operations that baited the Soviets into invading.

And as others have pointed out, the return for redemption took place prior to 9/11/2001.

I guess it will do well with so many issues (other being CIA operative that tortured involved in security) people have with it that seem a little ridiculous.

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Hosseini's next book, A Thousand Splendid Suns ends just
Posted by: Chloe2005 on Dec 15, 2007 7:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
after our invasion after 911. It leaves with the impression the Afghan people are hopeful that the US has driven out the Taliban. I loved both his books and feel I have learned alot about Afghanistan and it's people. Before these books, I am like most of the people, I never really thought about Afghanistan. His next book will be filled with more heartbreak for the people of Afghanistan.

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America - Stop The Endless Quest for Global Dominance
Posted by: sofla100 on Dec 16, 2007 10:11 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What we we know is that Osama and his crew attacked the WTC on 911. Somehow, or another, however, this mushroomed into the government of Afghanistan and the Taliban being the masterminds of the operation. However, it is more likely that Osama, already thrown out of Saudi Arabia, was essentially a free-lancer. Nevertheless, in no time at all, the USA has troops on the ground in Kabul. When will the USA finally get it? This police the world for democracy (really for "free markets" and oil), with wars and garrisoned troops across the globe has got to stop. If the local people want to live in a state of anarchy, or like barbarians, what right do we have to tell them what to do? Besides, is our way, the mega-corporations with a rich elite in control, any better anyway? America is just spending her way with this nonsense into bankruptcy. Trillion dollar wars, endless soldiering, when does it stop?

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Alternet, what's going on here?
Posted by: radioactivegavin on Dec 23, 2007 2:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was very interesting reading on the Alternet blog about the movie studio hiring a CIA torturer for background on this movie. I was impressed Alternet posted this information, leaving the decision of whether to see the film anyway up to readers. That is a great thing about Alternet, we get different points of view and think for ourselves. Great.

Then I get this email from Executive Editor Don Hazen:

Dear Reader,

"I just loved reading The Kite Runner. I couldn't put it down. And along the way, it
broke my heart. Now the film." (...He quotes this article by Laura Flanders...) "Sounds good to me. I'm looking forward to seeing the film
myself."


Don Hazen


The executive editor sends out an email which I can't find online, so there's no place to write any comments back. The email tells us he's going to the movie, but he omits any mention of the CIA spook or the real torture that was an asset to the movie's producers.

Needless to say, I'm disappointed to receive this email from Don Hazen. I felt like writing about it. Oh well, happy holidays.

-radioactiveGavin

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