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Aim: How does Hassan become Amir’s sacrificial lamb?

Aim: How does Hassan become Amir’s sacrificial lamb?. Do Now: What does it mean to sacrifice? What are you not willing to sacrifice in this world ?. “Remember, Amir agha. There’s no monster, just a beautiful day.” p. 61. What is Hassan trying to give Amir in this statement?

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Aim: How does Hassan become Amir’s sacrificial lamb?

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  1. Aim: How does Hassan become Amir’s sacrificial lamb? Do Now: What does it mean to sacrifice? What are you not willing to sacrifice in this world?

  2. “Remember, Amir agha. There’s no monster, just a beautiful day.” p. 61 • What is Hassan trying to give Amir in this statement? • What did Hassan’s dream seem to indicate?

  3. “For you a thousand times over!” p. 67 • What does Hassan do for Amir? • When is the next time Amir sees Hassan smile the way he does when he says this line? • Which literary element is being used in that example?

  4. A Memory • Why is the scene interrupted by Amir’s memories? • What do his memories show him?

  5. “It was the look of the lamb” p. 76 • How is Hassan like the lamb described in the passage? • What Amir describes Hassan as similar to the lamb, what literary element is his using?

  6. “In the end, I ran.” p. 77 • Why did Amir run? • How did the winter of 1975 make Amir what he is today? • If Hassan is Amir’s sacrificial lamb, for what did sacrifice him?

  7. “There’s no monster, just a beautiful day.” p. 61 • Now, what is the irony in this statement from the beginning of Chapter 7? • Who is the monster?

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