Why does amir rescue sohrab




















In response to his concerns about going to an orphanage, Amir promises him that we will never need to go to an orphanage again. Sohrab nods in agreement after Amir implores him to "Come home with me.

Amir finally calls home, after having been away for almost a month, and he tells Soraya everything that has occurred, not only during this return visit to Afghanistan, but also during his entire life. Amir encounters red tape at the American embassy, finding out that adopting Sohrab will not be as easy as he initially anticipated.

Raymond Andrews is the agent who tells Amir, "It's a dangerous business, making promises to kids. Although Amir is initially annoyed with Mr. Andrews' attitude, afterward he discovers that Mr. Andrews' daughter committed suicide. Sohrab takes a bath for an hour every night. Amir thinks to himself, "Do you feel clean yet, Sohrab? Omar Faisal is the immigration lawyer Amir seeks out for help and guidance.

Faisal explains the workings and the thinking of the INS for both readers and Amir and shows how difficult it will be to get a visa for Sohrab. Faisal goes through the various options with Amir, with the most promising — but by no means guaranteed — being the placing of Sohrab in an orphanage and the filing of an orphan petition. In rescuing Sohrab, this quest is near completion, but in fact will never be entire in the case of Baba, having taken the truth about his betrayal with him to his grave.

With the rescue of Sohrab from the clutches of the tyrannical Assef, Amir does find close to redemption, but not for his father, only himself. True redemption is when one atones for his own sins; Baba will remain restless in his grave. While Amir checks the string, he talks about Hassan. Then, with the kite ready, he asks Sohrab if he wants to fly it. When Amir offers again, Sohrab takes the string. A green kite approaches for a battle, and while Amir prepares Sohrab he notices Sohrab looks alert.

Amir asks if he should run the kite for Sohrab, and Sohrab nods. The ending of the book is not exactly a happy one, and not all loose ends are tied up neatly.

It is not certain that the characters we have come to know will get what they want. It is quite the opposite, in fact, and for Sohrab in particular there are fresh wounds that will leave permanent scars. The near endless abuse he has suffered is manifest in almost everything he does. Because of the physical and sexual abuse Assef and the Taliban inflicted on him, he flinches every time Amir reaches out to touch him. He also bathes for long periods because he feels he is literally dirty as a result of his rape.

Because of this abuse, as well as the abandonment he experienced when Hassan and Farzana were murdered, he is so terrified of going back to an orphanage, even temporarily, that he tries to kill himself. After he recovers, he says only that he wants his old life back. He stops speaking entirely, instead withdrawing into himself as if into a protective shell, completely unable to trust or open up to another person. In the pink scars on his wrists, he is left with a permanent mark of his trauma.

Like everyone in the novel, he may move beyond the past, but he can never undo it. As Amir prays in the hospital waiting room, he thinks the sins he committed against Hassan in the past are being revisited on him now.

Furthermore, because he once pushed Hassan away when Hassan needed him most, God is now taking Sohrab as punishment. Even the relief from his past feelings that he does experience is not uplifting and transformative.

He knows, for example, his guilt over his relationship with Baba was gone only because he feels no sting when he thinks Baba may have considered Hassan his true son. With all this, Khaled Hosseini suggests a general lesson about life: that there are no simple solutions to such emotionally and historically complex problems as those we have seen throughout the novel.

In a perfectly just world, Amir would have been able to adopt Sohrab without any difficulty and bring him home to a wonderful new life. The key is to a safe-deposit box that contains a significant amount of money that should cover Amir's expenses.

Finally, Rahim Khan asks Amir not to try to find him. As Amir is recovering, Farid encourages him to leave Peshawar as soon as possible; this triggers Amir's memory of the silent old man, who may be a spy for the Taliban.

Farid suggests moving to Islamabad in order to buy some time and remain hidden from the Taliban. Amir asks Farid to find John and Betty Caldwell. Amir and Sohrab play cards to pass the time. Amir's plan is to leave the hospital, get the money from the bank, and drop Sohrab off at the orphanage run by the Caldwells; however, when Farid arrives, he tells Amir that the Caldwells never existed.

Thus, Sohrab travels with Amir to Islamabad. During the ride there, Amir dozes. While he sleeps, he remembers various incidents and events from his life. The images flash quickly from one to another, and the final image is the memory of Rahim Khan saying "A way to be good again.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000