irelandopf.blogg.se

Other books by the author of the kite runner
Other books by the author of the kite runner













other books by the author of the kite runner

RFE/RL: What was it like to move to the United States as a teenager?

other books by the author of the kite runner

And there was - the refugee crisis began, and we knew people who were in prison, and tortured, and beaten, and killed.Īnd so my father applied for asylum to the United States, and instead of returning to Afghanistan my family moved instead to San Jose, California, in the fall in 1980, where most of my family has lived ever since.

other books by the author of the kite runner

While we were in Paris, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan and a war began, and things became very unstable back home. Hosseini: We left in 1976 because my father was assigned to a diplomatic post at the Afghan Embassy in Paris, and it was supposed to be a four-year assignment. RFE/RL: How and why did your family leave Afghanistan? So I feel very fortunate to have lived through the final few peaceful years of recent Afghan history. So it was a very, very different picture of Afghanistan than the one you would think of today if somebody said the word Afghanistan. Kabul was a growing, thriving, cosmopolitan city. My mother was a Farsi and history teacher at a large high school for girls my father was a diplomat at the Foreign Ministry.Īnd, you know, Afghanistan was a country at peace with itself, with its neighbors. Both of my parents were university educated. Khaled Hosseini: I was born there in 1965, and I grew up essentially in the pre-Soviet war era in Afghanistan. RFE/RL: Can you tell me about your childhood in Afghanistan? RFE/RL correspondent Courtney Brooks caught up with Hosseini at the United Nations on World Refugee Day, where he spoke about the plight millions of Afghans face, both inside and outside the beleaguered country. Hosseini and his family sought asylum in the United States and ended up in California, where he became a doctor and eventually wrote “The Kite Runner,” which was an overnight literary sensation. Hosseini told RFE/RL that when he left Afghanistan in 1976, Kabul was a "growing, thriving, cosmopolitan city." By the end of his father’s four-year post at the Afghan Embassy in Paris, his country had been invaded by the Soviet Union. Today, he is a doctor, a United Nations goodwill ambassador, and author of two internationally acclaimed books, “The Kite Runner” and “A Thousand Splendid Suns.” Novelist Khaled Hosseini came to the United States as a 15-year-old Afghan asylum seeker who knew only a few words of English.















Other books by the author of the kite runner