A Thousand Splendid Suns
discussion
Was Rasheed all bad?

I was repulsed by him while reading, any man who feels it's OK to beat women is in no shape or form areal man......Tariq was!




these stereotypes that had been embedded in his mind since his childhood, was embedded in let's say Hakim (Laila's dad) for instant too, since he was in that society too, but you don't see Hakim doing what Rasheed is doing, so that doesn't absolve him what he did.

these stereotypes that had been embe..."
The author doesn't say this, but may be Hakim grew up in a better family with better influences.

these stereotypes that had been embe..."
As he is to Laila.





Rasheed is a foil in the story used to show the challenges that many women in Afghanistan face on a daily basis. Whether he has goodness in him is irrelevant to the story. He is merely a literary device used to show the impact that general lack of education and unspeakable hardships have on peoples lives. Women and their children are almost always the most victimized in such societies. Making Rasheed a villain allows Hosseini's heroines to rise up agains an oppressive system that often breeds violence and injustice due to ignorance.

I agree to his being a literary device. However, along with "general lack of education and unspeakable hardships" the cultural sanction of multiple wives and the husband's right to physically punish his wives, and the inability for a woman to live on her own,reinforce the ability of a mediocre man to become a true villain.


This is crazy and a shame to hear I feel so upset when I hear these in just actions towards women , I'm just about to read .'reading Lolita in Tehran' a book about 7 women living in Iran I wonder if I'll come across more Rasheed type characters and injustice towards women in the book?.....

I don't think Rasheed's 'all-bad'. Sure, he's sexist and all, but I do believe he's not all bad. When you get to know the character at first, when Rasheed and Mariam get married at the beginning, before her multiple miscarriages, rasheed actually seems like a really caring and responsible husband. If I were to judge Rasheed by his behaviour all through the book, I would definitely disagree about him being the worst person ever. Truth is, he has both good and bad sides. It was just his bad side that was exposed more than his good side.


I think for me why he is all bad is because not only is he an animal with his beatings and behaviour he is a sorry excuse for a husband!!! Not just a sorry excuse for a man, as a married women myself when you take your vows a few miscarriages should not change your commitment to a women. If anything it should bring you closer, I've not experienced this eg miscarriage but I am a firm believer in 'in sickness and in health'



Thanks I will check out some of these books it is hard to take in some things but I like to know what/why somethings happen in some cultures or parts of the world.

I actually agree with you. When he came to an end I was celebrating because it was the end to his cruel raid.

That said, I don't support any of his actions.Him being a product of such a conservative society does justify his actions to an extent.However there were men in the same locality whose ideas were radically different. So he would always remain the bad guy for me because that is what the author wants us to consider him as.


When we analyze characters from a culturally and chronologically different era, we need to decide on which moral yardstick we are using to evaluate characters/actions. In that regard, its a very difficult question to answer, according to me. "All bad" also slams in our face a hard choice between an absolute stance we want to take versus a moderate one we don't want to.
After thinking about this more (details of the train of thought omitted), I feel I have no choice but to agree that he was indeed All bad, not just for the way he treated Mariam and Laila, but also Aziza. Tariq and Laila's dad were also men, but had respect and gratitude towards women; something whose even a morsel wasn't visible in Rasheed's character.

First off, no mention was made in the book about Rasheed's upbringing. Therefore, we don't really know what caused him to become this way. But it does mention that he may have been drunk while his first son drowned, and there is the fact that he not only beat Miriam and Laila, but his first wife as well. He also starved Laila and her baby girl for days when they tried to escape the first time, and then he proceeded to beat Miriam in the shed.
Any shred of him being a decent human being should have been obliterated when the book shows that he paid some hotel door man to tell Laila that her true love died. If that didn't happen then Laila wouldn't have been pulled towards marrying Rasheed.
Rasheed isn't "all that bad". He's more than that. He's one of those people we hope to God that we'll never, ever meet. We wouldn't wish him on our worst enemies.

The author is so good to describe people in his books, especially how he descriped Rasheed. It developed hatred in my heart towards him, and I could imagine in my mind how he looked like. He was definetaly a bad man who didn't respect women at all, but not in the beginning of the book.


If you think this isn't bad, sorry, you are in a way inciting others to be this GOOD!!!


I always believed that the culture in which people grew up in influenced their behaviour, but as someone said, Laila's father grew up in the same culture yet he was the most liberal, loving father one can get.In Afganistan, and even in neighboring countries like Pakistan and India( where I'm from) people like Rasheed are commonplace. So the reason can't be entirely blamed on culture.
After reading all the comments, I can safely say that I changed my mind and I believe Rasheed is 'all bad'.

I always believed that the culture in which people grew up in influenced thei..."
Akankshita wrote: "I didn't expect to get so many responses when I started this discussion, so a big thank you to everyone for that :)
I always believed that the culture in which people grew up in influenced thei..."
Akankshita wrote: "I didn't expect to get so many responses when I started this discussion, so a big thank you to everyone for that :)
I always believed that the culture in which people grew up in influenced thei..."
Akankshita wrote: "I didn't expect to get so many responses when I started this discussion, so a big thank you to everyone for that :)
I always believed that the culture in which people grew up in influenced thei..."
Thank you for starting the discussion. It raised some interesting questions about good and bad. If there was any "good" in Rasheed, I think it was most evident in his relationship with his son. But he was still a terrible person regardless of that.






I found rasheed's character as a person who considers himself really miserable and superior at the same time and let out his anger and cruelity on the weaker party. He was 'feudal lord' who had a need to dominate a submissive or weaker person and use her as his pet.

Yes, he was all bad."
I understand where your coming from with this thought process, he was a bad guy true, but he offer a house, food, comfort, rather than just living on the street to suffer he offered these women comfort. And a huge part of his behavior is based off of his surroundings, his parents were probably that way, they live in a location where they're uneducated, they dont know how to respect women, they're nothing but people who are made to breed children and clean, in this society during this time that was the norm, Laila's father was completely different, he was the outcast within that society not Rasheed.
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I don't think that he did this out of being 5% good. Laila was there to 1. Relive himself on (sexually) 2. Provide him a son. Mariam was there to smack around.
Tala wrote: “he is most probably like every other man in the world”
Wow...
Amir wrote: “To cut it short, I just like to ask everyone not to judge people easily. You cannot imagine what could become of you if you were in a situation such as that.
:)”
In which case, a lot more husbands in Rasheed’s neighbourhood should begin locking their tool sheds...