He is the narrator of the story who tells how he grew up in Afghanistan 
        and the sins he had committed against his friend and half-brother, Hassan. 
        It is his journey to redemption that is the premise of this tale. 
 He is the best and kindest character in the story. He is Amir's best 
        friend and as Amir later learns, he is also his half-brother. He faces 
        discrimination every day, because he is a Hazara, a minority whom the 
        Pashtuns treat like slaves. The sins committed against him - being raped 
        by Assef while Amir does nothing to help him - are immediately forgiven, 
        because he loves Amir so much. 
 He is Amir and Hassan's father, but because it would be shameful to 
        admit Hassan, a Hazara , was his son, the secret remains hidden long after 
        his death. In Amir's mind, he is larger than life, the man who was supposed 
        to have wrestled a bear. But, in reality, he was a man tormented by his 
        secrets. He dies in America, never again going home to his beloved Afghanistan. 
        While he lives there, he is poor and often dirty from his job. So the 
        way he is forced to live and the fact that he can never go home again 
        may be his punishment for what he did to both Amir and Hassan. Amir knows, 
        however, that like him, his father is basically a good man who finds a 
        way to be good again. 
 His character is that of the loyal servant to Baba and a father figure 
        to both Hassan and Amir. He often suffers humiliation at the hands of 
        Pashtun boys like Assef, but he never bends his will to them and continues 
        to be a figure of goodness. 
He is Hassan's son and the boy for whom Amir faces the Taliban to free. Like his father, he is raped by Assef and later betrayed by Amir. He even tries to commit suicide after Amir breaks his promise not to put him in an orphanage. However, Amir's willingness to help Sohrab face life again saves them both.
 Amir's wife, she, too, suffers from mistakes she made as a young woman, 
        but accepts her humiliation for running away with a man and becomes a 
        good, decent human being. She is denied motherhood, perhaps because that 
        is how she must expiate her own sins. However, she is rewarded when Sohrab 
        becomes her son and she and Amir finally have a complete family. 
 He was Baba's best friend and business partner and was a major part 
        of Amir and Hassan's life. He seems to understand Amir's desperate need 
        for his father's approval and tries to fill the gap Baba leaves in their 
        relationship. He knows all along how Amir betrayed Hassan and is the one 
        to call him and tell him there is still time to be good. He also sets 
        into the motion the plan to get Sohrab out of Afghanistan; he knows that 
        this is the only way to make up for never telling Amir and Hassan that 
        they were brothers. Like Amir, he too finds a way to be good. He goes 
        away to die alone, knowing that calling Amir back to his homeland was 
        the right thing to do. 
He is the villain of the story, a Pashtun boy who bullies Amir and Hassan and tries to humiliate Ali. He has a sociopathic nature even as a boy and admires Hitler for what he had done in eliminating the Jews. He wants to emulate this evil German by destroying all the Hazaras. He never forgets a slight from anyone and plots revenge. He becomes a Talib when the Taliban takes over Afghanistan and uses his power to kill innocent Afghans, especially Hazaras. He kills Hassan when he won't give up his home and he tries to kill Amir. It is only Sohrab's slingshot that finally defeats this evil man.
 Clapsaddle, Diane. "TheBestNotes on A Long Way Gone". 
          TheBestNotes.com.
            
            
            
            
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