Sins In The Kite Runner

Words: 1096
Pages: 5

I was raised in a christian home, learning the ten commandments, especially the seventh. “Thou shalt not steal” (Exodus 20:15). Stealing is not the worse sin you could commit, but in the book, The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini, one of the main characters, Baba, believes that stealing is the absolute worse sin and the only sin. A major theme throughout the book is theft and sin. In the story, Baba teaches us on his religious beliefs which differ from the standard beliefs taught by Mullah. Baba strongly preaches his beliefs but he does not follow them. Baba commits several sins each affecting the people closest to him and even though he finds a way to redeem himself for his wrongdoings, his biggest sin affects Hassan, Amir, and Ali as well himself.
“He loved you both, but he could not love Hassan the way he longed to, openly, as a father” (Hosseini 301). Everything Baba stole was sacred to someone, in Hassan’s case it was his identity, his right to his biological parents, and the knowledge of his brother. Hassan did
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When you tell a lie, you steal someone’s right to the truth. When you cheat, you steal the right to fairness” (18). Baba nearly killed a man, he stole the truth plenty of times, and he stole the Ali’s fairness. Bab is hypocritical because of the religion he proudly preaches, but fails to follow. He continuously committed sins throughout The Kite Runner, either affecting himself, Hassan, Amir, or Ali. In the end, according to Rahim Khan’s letter, Baba found forgiveness for his sins and with the help of Rahim Khan and Sohrab, Amir found ways to fix his and Babas. “There is no act more wretched than stealing” (18). Each character that committed a sin somehow worked for their forgiveness, while Baba stole from several people, including those the closest and most important to him, he worked throughout his entire life to find redemption for every