My mother had been in the Soviet whirlpool for eleven years by this point. Enough time, I imagine, to unlearn the bourgeois habits of her native Brooklyn, to accustom herself to the farting and shouting of her neighbours, to doing her washing by hand in the collective tub, to keeping her dry food locked up in her wardrobe Sana Krasikov
About This Quote

This quote from the book “The Kite Runner” is about the experience of growing up in a communist dictatorship. The author, Khaled Hosseini, was born and raised in Afghanistan and escaped with his family to Germany when he was a child. He had a very different experience than most people do when they grow up under such a regime. The author goes into great detail about how his mother was just as patriotic as everyone else, but that she had been forced to change her idea of loyalty and trust to fit into the rigid life of the Soviet Union. That just because someone is loyal to the government doesn't mean that person doesn’t also have their own personal opinions and desires.

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