“We don’t have, like, soccer, baseball or basketball,” said Ahmad Roshazai, a translator at a medical clinic near Bagram who was flying kites on the hill with two of his brothers. He had cuts on his fingers from handling the bladelike fighting string. “We don’t have any good places for that,” he said. “No green places.”
He added: “This is the only game we have every Friday. That’s it.”
The inveterate kite fighters speak of their craft as part science and part art. The key to excellence depends on a combination of factors, both empirical and ineffable: the flexibility and balance of the kites’ bamboo frames, the strength of the glue binding the tissue paper skin, the quality of the string, the evenness of the spool and, of course, the skill of the fliers and their ability to adjust to the vicissitudes of the wind."
As in our class assigned novel, the "Kite Runners" are children who cannot afford kites of their own to do "battle" in the sky. They chase wayward kites that have been defeated and then retrieve them, either to return them or keep them as their own.
What kinds of comparisons to this sport do you see to sports in our community? What does this "kite flying" signify? How does this sport create a sense of belonging or exclusion? Why would this sport be banned by the Taliban?