CHAPTER- THIRD- Lore has it my father - The Kite Runner - #Audio #Book- By Mr. KHALED HOSSEINI --- KHALED HOSSEINI - Author of The Kite Runner --- The Kite Runner - #Audio #Book- KHALED HOSSEINI - #The #Kite #Runner ---- 'Devastating' Daily Telegraph - 'Unforgettable' Isabel Allende --- 'Heartbreaking The Times - Writer : Mr. KHALED HOSSEINI
----
CHAPTER - THIRD- Lore
has it my father - The Kite Runner - #Audio #Book- By Mr. KHALED HOSSEINI
---
KHALED HOSSEINI - Author of The Kite
Runner
---
The Kite Runner - #Audio
#Book- KHALED HOSSEINI - #The #Kite
#Runner
----
'Devastating' Daily Telegraph - 'Unforgettable'
Isabel Allende
---
'Heartbreaking The Times - Writer :
Mr. KHALED HOSSEINI
-
------------------------------------------------
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61582814052126
------------------------------------------------
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61585805794623
------------------------------------------------
https://www.instagram.com/shivavoicelibrary/
------------------------------------------------
https://shivabooklibrary.blogspot.com/
-----------
CHAPTER - THIRD
-----------
Lore has it my
father once wrestled a black bear in Baluchistan with his bare hands. If the
story had been about anyone else, it would have been dismissed as laaf, that
Afghan tendency to exaggerate-sadly, almost a national affliction; if someone
bragged that his son was a doctor, chances were the kid had once passed a
biology test in high school. But no one ever doubted the veracity of any story
about Baba. And if they did, well, Baba did have those three parallel scars
coursing a jagged path down his back. I have imagined Baba's wrestling match
countless times, even dreamed about it. And in those dreams, I can never tell
Baba from the bear.
It was Rahim Khan
who first referred to him as what even-"Mr. Hurricane." It was an apt
enough nickname. My father tually became Baba's famous nickname, Toophan agha,
or was a force of nature, a towering Pashtun specimen with a thick beard, a
wayward crop of curly brown hair as the man himself, hands that looked capable
of uprooting willow tree, and a black glare that would "drop the devil to
his unruly as knees begging for mercy," as Rahim Khan used to say. At
par-ties, when all six-foot-five of him thundered into the room, attention
shifted to him like sunflowers turning to the sun.
Baba was
impossible to ignore, even in his sleep. I used to bury cotton wisps in my
ears, pull the blanket over my head, and still the sounds of Baba's snoring-so
much like a growl-ing truck engine-penetrated the walls. And my room was across
the hall from Baba's bedroom. How my mother ever managed to sleep in the same
room as him is a mystery to me. It's on the long list of things I would have
asked my mother if I had ever met her.
In the late 1960s,
when I was five or six, Baba decided to build an orphanage. I heard the story
through Rahim Khan. He told me Baba had drawn the blueprints himself despite
the fact that he'd had no architectural experience at all.
Skeptics
had urged him to stop his foolishness
and hire an architect. Of course, Baba refused, and everyone shook their heads
in dismay at his obstinate ways. Then Baba succeeded and everyone shook their heads
in awe at his triumphant ways. Baba paid for the construction of the two-story
orphan-age, just off the main strip of Jadeh Maywand south of the Kabul River,
with his own money. Rahim Khan told me Baba had personally funded the entire
project, paying for the engi-neers, electricians, plumbers, and laborers, not
to mention the city officials whose "mustaches needed oiling."
It took three
years to build the orphanage. I was eight by then. I remember the day before
the orphanage opened, Baba took me to Ghargha Lake, a few miles north of Kabul.
He asked me to fetch Hassan too, but I lied and told him Hassan had the runs. I
wanted Baba all to myself. And besides, one time at Ghargha Lake, Hassan and I
were skimming stones and Hassan made his stone skip eight times. The most I
man-aged was five. Baba was there, watching, and he patted Hassan on the back.
Even put his arm around his shoulder. We sat at a picnic table on the banks of
the lake, just Baba
and me, eating
boiled eggs with kofta sandwiches-meatballs deep blue and and pickles wrapped
in naan. The water was a on its looking glass-clear surface. On sunlight
glittered bustling with families out for a Fridays, the lake was the sun. But
it was midweek and there was day in only Baba and me, I'd heard them called.
They were sitting on the dock, feet us and a couple of longhaired, bearded
tourists-"hippies" dangling in the water, fishing poles in hand. I
asked Baba why they grew their hair long, but Baba grunted, didn't answer. He
was preparing his speech for the next day, flipping through a havoc of
handwritten pages, making notes here and there with a pencil. I bit into my egg
and asked Baba if it was true what a boy in school had told me, that if you ate
a piece of eggshell, you'd have to pee it out.
Baba
grunted again. I took a bite of my
sandwich. One of the yellow-haired tourists laughed and slapped the other one
on the back. In the distance, across the lake, a truck lumbered around a
cor-ner on the hill. Sunlight twinkled in its side-view mirror.
"I think I
have saratan," I said. Cancer. Baba lifted his head from the pages
flapping in the breeze. Told me I could get the soda myself, all I had to do
was look in the trunk of the car.
Outside the
orphanage, the next day, they ran out of chairs. A lot of people had to stand
to watch the opening cer-emony. It was a windy day, and I sat behind Baba on
the lit-tle podium just outside the main entrance of the new build-ing. Baba
was wearing a green suit and a caracul hat. Midway through the speech, the wind
knocked his hat off and everyone laughed. He motioned to me to hold his hat for
him and I was glad to, because then everyone would see that he was my father,
my Baba. He turned back to the microphone and said he hoped the building was
sturdier than his hat, and everyone laughed again. When Baba ended his speech,
people stood up and cheered. They clapped for a long time.
Afterward, people
shook his hand. Some of them tousled my hair and shook my hand too. I was so
proud of Baba, of us. But despite Baba's successes, people were always doubting
him. They told Baba that running a business wasn't in his blood and he should
study law like his father. So Baba proved them all wrong by not only running
his own business but becoming one of the richest merchants in Kabul. Baba and
Rahim Khan built a wildly successful carpet-exporting busi-ness, two
pharmacies, and a restaurant.
When people scoffed that Baba
would never marry well-after all, he was not of royal blood-he wedded my
mother, Sofia Akrami, a highly educated woman universally regarded as one of
Kabul's most respected, beautiful, and virtuous ladies. And not only did she
teach classic Farsi literature at the university, she was a descendant of the
royal family, a fact that my father playfully rubbed in the skeptics' faces by
referring to her as "my princess."
With
me as the glaring exception, my father molded the world around him to his
liking. The problem, of course, was that Baba saw the world in black and white.
And he got to decide what was black and what was white. You can't love a person
who lives that way without fearing him too. Maybe even hating him a little.
When I was in
fifth grade, we had a mullah who taught us about Islam. His name was Mullah
Fatiullah Khan, a short, stubby man with a face full of acne scars and a gruff
voice. He lectured us about the virtues of zakat and the duty of hadj; he
taught us the intricacies of performing the five daily namaz prayers, and made
us memorize verses from the Koran-and though he never translated the words for
us, he did stress, sometimes with the help of a stripped willow branch, that we
had to pronounce the Arabic words correctly so God would hear us better. He
told us one day that Islam considered drink-ing a terrible sin; those who drank
would answer for their sin on the day of Qiyamat, Judgment Day. In those days,
drinking was fairly common in Kabul. No one gave you a public lashing for it,
but those Afghans who did drink did so in private, out of respect. People
bought their scotch as "medicine" in brown paper bags from selected
"pharmacies." They would leave with the bag tucked out of sight,
sometimes drawing furtive, disap-proving glances from those who knew about the
store's repu-tation for such transactions.
We were
upstairs in Baba's study, the smoking
room, when I told him what Mullah Fatiullah Khan had taught us in class, Baba
was pouring himself a whiskey from the bar he had built in the corner of the
room. He listened, nodded, took a sip from his drink. Then he lowered himself
into the leather sofa, put down his drink, and propped me up on his lap. I felt
as if I were sitting on a pair of tree trunks. He took a deep breath and
exhaled through his nose, the air hissing through his mustache for what seemed
an eternity. I couldn't decide whether I wanted to hug him or leap from his lap
in mortal fear.
"I see you've
confused what you're learning in school with actual education," he said in
his thick voice.
"But if what
he said is true then does it make you a sin-ner, Baba?"
"Hmm."
Baba crushed an ice cube between his teeth. "Do you want to know what your
father thinks about sin?"
"Yes."
"Then I'll
tell you," Baba said, "but first understand this and understand it
now, Amir: You'll never learn anything of value from those bearded
idiots."
"You mean
Mullah Fatiullah Khan?"
Baba gestured with
his glass. The ice clinked. "I mean all of them. Piss on the beards of all
those self-righteous mon-keys."
I began to giggle.
The image of Baba pissing on the beard of any monkey, self-righteous or
otherwise, was too much.
"They do
nothing but thumb their prayer beads and recite a book written in a tongue they
don't even understand." He took a sip. "God help us all if
Afghanistan ever falls into their hands."
"But Mullah
Fatiullah Khan seems nice," I managed between bursts of tittering.
"So did
Genghis Khan," Baba said. "But enough about that. You asked about sin
and I want to tell you. Are you lis-tening?"
"Yes," I
said, pressing my lips together. But a chortle escaped through my nose and made
a snorting sound. That got me giggling again.
Baba's
stony eyes bore into mine and, just
like that, I wasn't laughing anymore. "I mean to speak to you man to man.
Do you think you can handle that for once?"
"Yes, Baba
jan," I muttered, marveling, not for the first time, at how badly Baba could
sting me with so few words. We'd had a fleeting good moment---it wasn't often
Baba talked to me, let alone on his lap-and I'd been a fool to waste it.
"Good,"
Baba said, but his eyes wondered. "Now, no mat-ter what the mullah
teaches, there is only one sin, only one. And that is theft. Every other sin is
a variation of theft. Do you understand that?"
"No, Baba
jan," I said, desperately wishing I did. I didn't want to disappoint him
again.
Baba heaved a sigh
of impatience. That stung too, because he was not an impatient man. I
remembered all the times he didn't come home until after dark, all the times I
ate dinner alone. I'd ask Ali where Baba was, when he was com-ing home, though
I knew full well he was at the construction site, overlooking this, supervising
that. Didn't that take patience? I already hated all the kids he was building
the orphanage for; sometimes I wished they'd all died along with their parents.
"When you
kill a man, you steal a life," Baba said. "You
steal his wife's
right to a husband, rob his children of a father. When you tell a lie, you
steal someone's right to the truth. When you cheat, you steal the right to
fairness. Do you see?" I did. When Baba was six, a thief walked into my
grandfa-ther's house in the middle of the night. My grandfather, a respected
judge, confronted him, but the thief stabbed him in the throat, killing him
instantly--and robbing Baba of a father. The townspeople caught the killer just
before noon the next day; he turned out to be a wanderer from the Kunduz
region. They hanged him from the branch of an oak tree with still two hours to
go before afternoon prayer.
It was
Rahim Khan, not Baba, who had told me
that story. I was always learning things about Baba from other people.
"There is no
act more wretched than stealing, Amir," Baba said. "A man who takes
what's not his to take, be it a life or a loaf of naan... I spit on such a man.
And if I ever cross paths with him, God help him. Do you understand?"
I found the idea
of Baba clobbering a thief both exhilarat-ing and terribly frightening.
"Yes, Baba."
"If there's a
God out there, then I would hope he has more important things to attend to than
my drinking scotch or eat-ing pork. Now, hop down. All this talk about sin has
made me thirsty again."
I watched him fill
his glass at the bar and wondered how much time would pass before we talked
again the way we just had. Because the truth of it was, I always felt like Baba
hated me a little. And why not? After all, I had killed his beloved wife, his
beautiful princess, hadn't I? The least I could have done was to have had the
decency to have turned out a little more like him. But I hadn't turned out like
him. Not at all.
IN SCHOOL, we used
to play a game called Sherjangi, or "Battle of the Poems." The Farsi
teacher moderated it and it went something like this: You recited a verse from
a poem and your opponent had sixty seconds to reply with a verse that began
with the same letter that ended yours. Everyone in my class wanted me on their
team, because by the time I was eleven, I could recite dozens of verses from
Khayyám, Hafez, or Rumi's famous Masnawi. One time, I took on the whole class
and won. I told Baba about it later that night, but he just nod-ded, muttered,
"Good."
That was
how I escaped my father's aloofness, in
my dead mother's books. That and Hassan, of course. I read everything, Rumi,
Hafez, Saadi, Victor Hugo, Jules Verne, Mark Twain, Ian Fleming. When I had
finished my mother's books-not the boring history ones, I was never much into
those, but the novels, the epics-I started spending my allowance on books. I
bought one a week from the bookstore near Cinema Park, and stored them in
cardboard boxes when I ran out of shelf room.
Of course,
marrying a poet was one thing, but fathering a son who preferred burying his
face in poetry books to hunt-ing... well, that wasn't how Baba had envisioned
it, I sup-pose. Real men didn't read poetry and God forbid they should ever
write it! Real men-real boys-played soccer just as Baba had when he had been
young. Now that was some-thing to be passionate about. In 1970, Baba took a
break from the construction of the orphanage and flew to Tehran for a month to
watch the World Cup games on television, since at the time Afghanistan didn't
have TVs yet. He signed me up for soccer teams to stir the same passion in me.
But I was pathetic, a blundering liability to my own team, always in the way of
an opportune pass or unwittingly blocking an open lane. I shambled about the
field on scraggy legs, squalled for passes that never came my way. And the
harder I tried, wav-ing my arms over my head frantically and screeching,
"I'm open! I'm open!" the more I went ignored. But Baba wouldn't give
up. When it became abundantly clear that I hadn't inher-ited a shred of his athletic
talents, he settled for trying to turn me into a passionate spectator.
Certainly I could manage that, couldn't I? I faked interest for as long as
possible. I cheered with him when Kabul's team scored against Kandahar and
yelped insults at the referee when he called a penalty against our team.
But Baba
sensed my lack of gen-uine interest and
resigned himself to the bleak fact that his son was never going to either play
or watch soccer. I remember one time Baba took me to the yearly Buzkashi
tournament that took place on the first day of spring, New Year's Day. Buzkashi
was, and still is, Afghanistan's national passion. A chapandaz, a highly
skilled horseman usually patronized by rich aficionados, has to snatch a goat
or cattle carcass from the midst of a melee, carry that carcass with him around
the stadium at full gallop, and drop it in a scoring cir. cle while a team of
other chapandaz chases him and does everything in its power-kick, claw, whip,
punch-to snatch the carcass from him. That day, the crowd roared with
excite-ment as the horsemen on the field bellowed their battle cries and
jostled for the carcass in a cloud of dust. The earth trem-bled with the
clatter of hooves. We watched from the upper bleachers as riders pounded past
us at full gallop, yipping and
yelling, foam
flying from their horses' mouths. At one point Baba pointed to someone.
"Amir, do you see that man sitting up there with those other men around
him?"
I did.
"That's Henry
Kissinger."
"Oh," I
said. I didn't know who Henry Kissinger was, and I might have asked. But at the
moment, I watched with hor-ror as one of the chapandaz fell off his saddle and
was tram-pled under a score of hooves. His body was tossed and hurled in the
stampede like a rag doll, finally rolling to a stop when the melee moved on. He
twitched once and lay motionless, his legs bent at unnatural angles, a pool of
his blood soaking through the sand.
I began to cry.
I cried all the
way back home. I remember how Baba's hands clenched around the steering wheel.
Clenched and unclenched. Mostly, I will never forget Baba's valiant efforts to
conceal the disgusted look on his face as he drove in silence.
Later
that night, I was passing by my
father's study when I overheard him speaking to Rahim Khan. I pressed my ear to
the closed door.
"-grateful
that he's healthy," Rahim Khan was saying.
"I know, I
know. But he's always buried in those books or shuffling around the house like
he's lost in some dream."
"And?"
"I wasn't
like that." Baba sounded frustrated, almost angry.
Rahim Khan laughed.
"Children aren't coloring books. You don't get to fill them with your
favorite colors."
"I'm telling
you," Baba said, "I wasn't like that at all, and neither were any of
the kids I grew up with."
"You know,
sometimes you are the most self-centered man I know," Rahim Khan said. He
was the only person I knew who could get away with saying something like that
to Baba.
"It has
nothing to do with that."
"Nay?"
"Nay."
"Then
what?"
I heard the
leather of Baba's seat creaking as he shifted on it. I closed my eyes, pressed
my ear even harder against the door, wanting to hear, not wanting to hear.
"Sometimes I look out this window and I see him playing on the street with
the neighborhood boys. I see how they push him around, take his toys from him,
give him a shove here, a whack there. And, you know, he never fights back.
Never. He just drops his head and
"So he's not
violent," Rahim Khan said.
"That's not
what I mean, Rahim, and you know it," Baba shot back. "There is
something missing in that boy."
"Yes, a mean
streak."
"Self-defense
has nothing to do with meanness. You know what always happens when the
neighborhood boys tease him? Hassan steps in and fends them off. I've seen it
with my own eyes. And when they come home, I say to him, 'How did Hassan get
that scrape on his face?' And he says, 'He fell down.' I'm telling you, Rahim,
there is something missing in that boy."
"You just
need to let him find his way," Rahim Khan said.
"And
where is he headed?" Baba said.
"A boy who won't stand up for himself becomes a man who can't stand up to
anything."
"As usual
you're oversimplifying."
"I don't
think so."
"You're angry
because you're afraid, he'll never take over the business for you."
"Now who's
oversimplifying?" Baba said. "Look, I know there's a fondness between
you and him and I'm happy about that. Envious, but happy. I mean that. He needs
someone who... understands him, because God knows I don't. But something about
Amir troubles me in a way that I can't express. It's like..." I could see
him searching, reaching for the right words. He lowered his voice, but I heard
him any-way. "If I hadn't seen the doctor pull him out of my wife with my
own eyes, I'd never believe he's my son."
THE NEXT MORNING,
as he was preparing my breakfast, Hassan asked if something was bothering me. I
snapped at him, told him to mind his own business.
Rahim Khan had
been wrong about the mean streak thing.
And friends, that was today's
chapter.
Now, let's meet again in the next
video with a new chapter.
Please Subscribe, like and share
and May you always remain happy,
prosperous, and healthy.
Thanks to you, Namaskar, Jai Hind,
Jai Bhaarath.
Reviewed by Shiv Rana RCM
on
जून 07, 2026
Rating:


कोई टिप्पणी नहीं:
एक टिप्पणी भेजें