Paper Title
THE LOSS OF A WHOLE GENERATION OF HOMEOWNERSAbstract
This paper\'s primary goal is to reinterpret Nemat Sadat\'s \"The Carpet Weaver\" in light of the current situation of Afghani refugees in Pakistan. To begin, the study examines the post-colonial wars in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the United States. The political turmoil of the 1970s in Afghanistan is the subject of debate. Millions of Afghans sought refuge in countries like the United States, Pakistan, and Iran after the rising of the Mujahideen and a smaller Maoist organisation against the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and the Soviet army, triggering the fall of the Soviet Union. Second, the misery of Afghani families who have had their property seized, their privacy invaded, and Kanishka\'s Baba killed as a result of his involvement in the rebellion to overthrow President Daoud. The third is the information supplied by Nemat Sadat regarding the terrible conditions in Pakistani refugee camps, where human trafficking and exploitation occur on several levels. The protagonist Kanishka and his family are among the many refugees who have fled abuse, exploitation, and oppression in their home country.
Kanishka was a slave of the voracious and salacious dictator Tor Gul, who violated her for over two years. Last but not least, it explains why other emerging countries could not provide basic human comforts and human rights together with a safe place to live. The ways in which camps for displaced people become breeding grounds for exploitation, manipulation, oppression, and even slavery. It\'s a story of individuals who managed to get away, and maybe even find a better life elsewhere, but who are still haunted by questions of who they are, why they left, and what they left behind.
KEYWORDS : Refugee, Migration, Post-colonial, Identity, Diaspora, Homosexuality.