In The Kite Runner, the film adaptation of Khaled Hosseini's
best-selling path-to-manhood tale, it's the creations of renowned local
kite maker Noor Agha that fill the sky. Banned during Taliban rule, kite
flying — and the more combative kite dueling — is once again
Afghanistan's national passion, so Agha's business was already booming.
But when DreamWorks came calling, he had to recruit the women in his
family to learn this traditionally male craft.
They all work together in one room. That includes both his wives:
Marzia, who makes the bold graphics of each kite into completely unique
patchwork patterns, and Farida, who completes the tails and imprints
Agha's name and signature scorpion image.
The two wives, working
and raising their combined 11 children, are the collaboration that
holds the whole kite-making operation together — maybe even more than
the family's trademark secret glue.

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