I’ve not read Khaled Hosseini’s novel, I’ve not watched the
film and I missed the stage production when it arrived at Theatr Clwyd last
year. I had heard rave reviews and so I was thankful that this time round I
would be blessed enough to see the stage production…and I wasn’t to be disappointed.
The reviews from friends and strangers were spot on. The production was
spellbinding and a superior history lesson than either the media or the
classroom could give you.
The Kite Runner commenced life as a novel by Khaled Hosseini
and it tells the story of Amir and his best friend Hassan (who is also his
servant). Kabul was a tranquil place, people lived in harmony experiencing a conventional
way of life. Privileged families would attend lavish weddings, full of colour
and splendour and take family picnics in the foothills of the Hindu Kush to
escape the heat of the city.
Kite flying, which probably originated in China about 3000
years ago, was turned it into an art form in Afghanistan, by taking on a
different competitive twist. Enjoyed by both men and boys, this was a
competition that was less bloody than dog fighting and very cheap, so anyone
had the opportunity to join in. A person would just need some bamboo to make a
frame and some brightly coloured tissue paper to stretch across it. For those
with money, they could visit the Kabul bazaar where professional kite makers
would hand down their skills from father to son. Tiny pieces of crushed glass
would be painstakingly glued to the kite string for competitors to slash their opponent’s
kite string, bringing their kites crashing to the ground. The poorest boys,
such as Hassan, would rush to collect the losing kite for their friend or
master – these were the kite runners.
Matthew Spangler’s stage
adaptation of the novel is told in the first-person narrative through the eyes
of Amir (David Ahmad.) His tale which
starts in Afghanistan as a child, transitions through to adulthood where he is
living in America and it transports us through a harrowing journey of life and
intimate relationships: father/son, best friends, husband and wife.
Before the play commences,
Hanif Khan takes to the front corner of the stage and starts playing complex
rhythms on the tabla, two barrel-shaped small drums, which set the scene and
provide an underscore to the play. He starts and stops on certain words
throughout the play, pausing for key moments and providing another element of
intense drama throughout.
The storytelling in the
first act is very engaging. David Ahmad’s transition from playful child to
adult narrator, is seamless and the early scenes between him and Hassan (Andrei
Costin) are beautifully choreographed and full of such warmth that you can’t
help but have a sense of foreboding as to what is to come. Hassan would be lost
without his close friend Amir and would do anything for him. There is a sweet,
naive quality to him, which makes the betrayal of Amir even harder to swallow.
Afghanistan is a country that has been under invasion since
the time of Alexander the Great. The country may only be about the size of
Texas, but the landlocked country was the gateway to Asia from the Middle East.
When the play commences, Afghanistan was a country at peace. It had been since
1919 when the British finally recognised Afghanistan’s independence and moved
their forces back inside the border of the Indian Empire. The country was run
by Zahir Shah who was more content to read poetry than try to exert any
political power over the country. In the 1950’s when the Cold War started, he didn’t
take sides and kept his country out of the conflict by diplomatically taking
aid from both the Americans and the Russians!
Of course, there were political divisions within the
country, but they were not causing violence at this time. The Pashtun were Afghanistan’s
largest ethnicity and lived in the South and East of the country, they were the
people who supplied the Kings of Kabul. To the North and west of the country,
the second largest group was the Tajiks. Their language Farsi became the
language of the country’s court, art and literature. The Hazaras accounted for
about 10% of the population and were part of the Islamic Shia sect. however
their distinct Central Asian look always had them suffer discrimination.
For the traveller, Afghanistan was a country full of colour
and vigour, with stunning scenery. Its mix of narrow gauges, mountains and
deserts enticed adventurer to make their way across the country on their
journey through Europe towards India. Travellers could move to a slower pace,
relaxing for days in tea houses strewn with beautiful carpets and cushions and
sampling the exotic fruit and nuts of the country. Family was at the heart of
everything, and this carefully woven story shows the importance and strength of
the relationship between father and son.
It’s hard to think that it was the year I was born when the
peace and tranquillity of Afghanistan began to diminish. The King was
overthrown by his cousin and two new developments occurred in the hope of
ending the high illiteracy rates in Afghanistan. A group of Islamists wanted to
halt the rise of Western customs and return the country back to its religious
values. It was also the rise of the
People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), who were a pro-Soviet group
who wanted land reform and mass education. In 1978, the PDPA were victorious –
gaining power via an army coup.
The Soviet Union invaded the country in 1979 in
order to assist the PDPA in their hopes of modernising their country, however,
this caused more harm than good. A vicious war ensued and well-off families
such as Amir’s were targeted as counter-revolutionaries. Just like Amir and his
father, the wealthy fled to Pakistan where they thought they would be safe.
The play commences in the
1970’s. Amir’s father Baba (Dean Rahman) is a wealthy man with tradional
values. David Ahmad’s narration recalls the events, the twists and turns that
occur over a short timeframe in history, that lead them to fleeing to
California as a refugee and what him and his father found when they arrived
upon American shores. Baba and Amir are Pashtun Sunni Muslims, Hassan is Hazara
Shia, but despite both the difference in social backgrounds, there is a unity
and warmth between the two. This unusual friendship comes to the attention of
the local bully Assef (Bhavin Bhatt) and the violence that ensues is stomach
churning.
Amir is desperate to impress
his father and he believes he can do this by winning the kite competition which
is due to take place. Hassan is an exceptional kite runner and the two friends
are convinced that between them they will win the competition and earn the
respect of Baba. History will play a huge part in what lies in store for these
best friends and the inevitable different paths they will be forced to take.
No-one could foresee the repercussions that would take place following the
competition nor the terrible incident which would shatter their lives forever.
Following the war, the mujahedin (Islamists) held the fate
of the country in their hands. At the time, the US was seen as the West’s
enemy. As the Islamists were fighting the West’s foe, Britain armed and
financed them; this included a name now familiar to most people – Osama Bin
Laden.
Reports by Westerners walking around Kabul at this time
advised that it was still safe to walk the streets. There were arrests, but the
city wasn’t being destroyed by car bombs or suicide attacks. Even the women
were still given the freedom to work in public posts such as offices, banks and
shops without the need to cover their heads. In university campuses, the female
students attended lectures alongside their male counterparts and were still
allowed to wear western style dress (short skirts) as they had done during King
Zahir Shah.
In 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev became the new leader of the
Soviet Union. He could see that in the Afghan countryside, the traditional role
of women still applied. They were largely confined to their homes and western
influences could not pervade these homesteads. He saw it was a futile war that
he could not win and he withdrew his army. Following the withdrawal Kabul was
still under the control of Najibullah Ahmadzai (President of Afghanistan from
1987 until 1992) however in 1992 the mujahideen took over Kabul and turned
their guns on one another.
When the Talban, a group of younger jihadis who threw out
their elder warlords, took over the country in 1996, kite flying was outlawed. They
enforced a strict policy on women and any un-Islamic conduct. Under Taliban
rule it was the women who suffered the most, they could no longer work outside
of the home or attend school after the age of eight. The burqa became
mandatory, and they had to be chaperoned by a close male relative if they were
required to leave the house. Music, TV and other forms of entertainment were
banned, even weather forecasting was outlawed, but it was kite flying that was despised
by the regime.
Anyone who was noncompliant to the regime would be met with
harsh punishments from beatings to having fingers or hands cut off or even
public executions. A country that had one enjoyed the freedoms of the Western
world had been transported back to the old ways of the Pashtun countryside. The
freedom that we saw at the beginning of the play was well and truly over for
Amir, Hassan and Baba.
For you, a thousand times over.
The production relies
heavily on David Ahmad and he features on stage throughout much of the
performance. We watch his metamorphosis between the adult and child Amir and it
is through this, despite his cowardice and betrayal towards his best friend,
that you can empathise with him. You can see the dilemma he finds himself in
and why it is not as easy for him to tell the truth as one would have hoped he
would have done.
The reverse of this is true
with Andrei Costin playing Hassan and then later his son Sohrab. His loyalty
and devotion is both inspirational as you watch him try to understand and
tackle the bullying and racism that he encounters at the hands of Assef, who
starts off as a violent bully before emerging later as a Taliban terrorist.
Dean Rehman’s portrayal of
Baba is an interesting one. He starts the play as a rich man, powerful, a name
in society. He is kind and benevolent to his servants, taking an interest in
Hassan, never forgetting his birthday, but despite all his wealth he can do
nothing once his country is invaded. He is like all the other refugees fleeing
the country with only a suitcase to show for his past life. His despair at
being forced to leave the country of his birth is distressing to watch, as is witnessing his further battles once he moves to America.
I think it is easy for people to forget the reasons why
people become refugees. Individuals see stories in the tabloids and focus on
the attention-grabbing headlines, but the human stories are often bypassed or forgotten
about in these political point scoring articles from the gutter press. That is
why I started this account by saying “The production was spellbinding and a
superior history lesson than either the media or the classroom could give you.”
That is the joy of the theatre. It is a magical place of emotional engagement which
opens its doors to educate, entertain and allows for a discussion over a cold
glass of wine afterwards.
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