Today’s 
Enlightening Entertainment 
will be presented 
in Dari and English, 
with subtitles in Arabic, 
Aulacese (Vietnamese), 
Chinese, English, 
French, German, 
Indonesian, Japanese, 
Korean, Malay, Persian,
Portuguese, Russian, 
Spanish and Thai.
Welcome, 
spirited viewers.
The beauty of a kite 
dancing in the sky 
is a sight to behold. 
In Afghanistan, 
flying kites is more than 
just a favorite pastime 
but a time-honored, 
popular cultural tradition. 
A soaring kite is 
like the carefree spirit 
of the Afghan heart.
Today we will meet 
a fabulous kite master 
from Afghanistan, 
Mr. Basir Beria, who lives 
in Los Angeles, USA. 
He devotes his free time 
to teaching others 
how to fly a kite. 
His fine handmade kites 
are exhibited at 
the Kite Museum in 
Washington DC, USA. 
In addition, Mr. Beria 
helped to create 
the Golden Globe 
and Oscar-nominated 
Hollywood film, 
“The Kite Runner,” 
which showed 
Mr. Beria’s splendid kites 
and thus introduced 
the world to this 
Afghan sport and culture.
In his personal life, 
the simple act of 
flying a kite could relieve 
his deepest sorrow 
and give him peace. 
Mr. Basir Beria has 
a pure, undivided love 
for kites.
You see, there are 
so many things. 
It’s a meditation. 
It kind of makes you 
to calm down.  
You take in a breath, 
and you look in the sky.  
You’re just 
in your own world.  
I dance with my kites. 
I dance and 
I connect myself, 
every move with my kite.  
Kites, it’s going to 
give you that energy, 
and you give them 
that energy back.  
And you feel good.
Mr. Basir Beria was born 
in Kabul, Afghanistan. 
Flying kites was 
a main hobby for him, 
his brother and 
neighborhood friends.
If you go 
in the United States, 
open your garage, 
I can find a baseball bat.  
In Afghanistan, you 
end up in my garage, 
probably you find tissue 
paper, bamboo, glass, 
because we’re going to 
use that one for our kite 
to build. 
Every Afghan builds kites. 
Me, personally, I always 
say to my old friends, 
I eat kite, I drink kite, 
I sleep kite. 
I do everything with kites.  
Somehow it’s in me; 
I’m the luckiest one.
To the grateful, humble 
craftsman, the technology 
of the kite is a gift 
for the world. 
So is Mr. Beria’s talent.
In 2006, Mr. Beria was 
invited by a producer of 
DreamWorks Pictures 
to help create 
“The Kite Runner,” 
a 2007 film 
by DreamWorks and 
Paramount Classic based 
on the award-winning 
novel of the same title by 
the Afghan-born writer 
Kahled Hosseini. 
Kite runners are those 
who run to collect 
prized kites that fall 
during a kite match, 
predicting from afar 
where they would land. 
I fly a kite 
in the major street during 
the busiest crowd time. 
And I was surrounded 
with all those power lines, 
and they said, “Can you 
fly a kite from here?” 
I said, “Why not?” 
And I fly my kite 
from there. 
“How in the world 
you can fly a kite which is 
all the line and all trees 
and all the houses 
right there?” 
“That’s Afghan kites. 
They can fly from 
anywhere they want.”  
Joining the movie crew 
as kite master, Mr. Beria 
brought 100 kites that 
he personally made and 
committed to 
a 15-week trip to the film 
set in western China, 
where the landscape 
resembles Afghanistan. 
Mr. Beria proceeded to 
teach 150 kids how to 
fly kites for the film’s 
impressive backdrop.
I did it from my heart. 
I hope people like 
the action of the kite. 
I don’t know about 
the story too much, 
but I involved myself to 
concentrate whatever 
it comes to the kite. 
Kites’ talk, whatever 
they’re using those 
little words, the kids, 
the right way.  
The way you emotionally 
you have to say,  
“Straighten 
your lines up!” 
or using those words to 
fit in that moment 
for those kids. 
I have to focus 
the kite back in ’77. 
What was the shape, 
what was the color 
the people using.  
I’m proud to say 
I did it and we did it. 
And Marc Forster, 
the director of the movie, 
he’s happy 
the way we did it 
and everybody’s happy
the way we finished it, 
and thanks God again for 
that kind of opportunity.
Please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television. 
We will find out more 
about kite making
with Mr. Basir Beria, 
the great kite master 
from Afghanistan. 
There is a word, 
people in United States, 
when they don’t like 
something, they said, 
“Go fly a kite, 
my friend.” 
(Yeah, that’s right.) 
For me, if somebody 
said, “Go fly a kite,” 
(It’s a blessing.) 
I am going to jump 
and I give him a hug. 
(Wow, that’s wonderful.) 
That’s how I feel
about the kites. 
(Go fly a kite!) 
Go fly a kite.
Welcome back to 
Enlightening Entertainment.
For Afghan kite master 
Mr. Basir Beria, training 
the Kashgar children 
in kite flying for the 
highly acclaimed film, 
“The Kite Runner,” 
was an unforgettable 
experience. 
However, 
while he was proud to 
walk the red carpet 
with his family 
to the film’s premiere 
and watch his kites 
soaring on the big screen, 
the real reward was 
much greater than 
the movie itself.
So we were practicing 
every day 
for like a month. 
One day, it was 
after a break time. 
Because they’re working 
hard too, you know.  
I saw a little boy, 
he was excited but 
he was running to me, 
he’s coming, 
And I was saying, I hope 
he doesn’t hurt himself.  
They call me teacher. 
“Mahalim, mahalim. 
“Teacher, teacher. 
Mahalim.” 
I said, 
“What’s happening, 
what’s happened?” 
He had something 
in his hand. 
Teacher, I found 
something,” 
I said what? 
Look it, it’s beautiful.
I said, “What is it?” 
He opened his hand. 
That stone shaped like 
of a kite. 
You see the metal bar, 
you see the top bow, 
(Wow.) the lines 
and shape of a kite. 
And I look and I was 
really surprised.  
I said, “You see, 
my friend, you’re 
a good kite flyer. 
You see, God gave you 
your trophy already. 
He said, “No no no no, 
Teacher. That’s for you. 
(Wow.) 
You’re my teacher. 
I bring down one for you.” 
That’s for me 
was the highest trophy 
for a man can get.  
It was created by God.  
(Yes.) 
It was natural, (Wow.) 
it was given it to you, 
that’s a little boy, 
not a minister, 
not a president of 
DreamWorks.   
And I said, 
“You know what?  
I got my right trophy, 
designed by God, 
created by God, 
in the cleanliest hands 
is the child, the kid.  
That means to me a lot.  
The kite was invented 
in China two thousand 
some years ago. 
The sport of kites, 
however, took kite flying 
to the next level 
with exciting matches 
in the sky. 
It originated from India 
long ago 
before becoming popular 
in Afghanistan. 
Imagine, you are flying 
kites 300 feet high, 
and you just want to – 
right now, right away. 
It’s not electricity, 
it’s just line. 
You want to give it 
a left spin, 
spinning it to the left. 
How it’s going to work? 
You see, that’s why 
the cotton lines are 
the quickest line that can 
give response to the kite. 
If you just give him 
a little signal, 
just a little touch, 
the kite responds quickly.
In the Afghan kite sport, 
two flyers try to 
pull the other’s kite 
from the sky by wrapping 
one’s kite string around 
the opponent’s kite’s 
string and severing it.
The strong glass-coated 
cord attached to the kite 
holds the secret 
of the Afghan kite.
So this is the line that 
you actually use 
for kite flying.
Those are the lines. 
We call it 
“Taar-e-Sheesha,” 
which is sheesha 
means the glass. 
Glass-coated taar. 
It’s very simple. 
We grind the glass 
as much as possible 
to become like 
a face powder.  
And we cook it with rice, 
and there are so many 
little things, you know, 
it’s kind of secret. 
We mix it, we cook it, 
and we coat it 
on top of the lines. 
And that’s the lines 
everybody in Afghanistan 
is using. 
They have their own 
secrets, some of them. 
They never share it. 
I share it, a little bit of it, 
but not all of it. 
I have to keep some 
of the secrets which 
I learned from a person. 
He was one of 
the best kite flyers in the 
Afghan society. (Wow.) 
World-known person.
I can’t break that, 
that’s very strong.
It’s an over 
120-pound line. 
And that line, 
it’s an 11-pound line. 
You want to see 
the sharpness. 
If you want to hold that 
line, I want to cut it. 
I want to show you 
how that line is going cut 
that line. For example… 
Wow, just a few inches 
rubbing across. 
You see, that one is not
glass-coated, look at
how rough it is. (Oh.)
You cannot match me, 
my friend. (I cannot.)
Colorful kites dotting the 
sky in a US kite festival 
create a scene that 
brings back memories 
of childhood delight 
in Afghanistan.
Peace be upon you, 
cherished Father!
Peace be upon you, 
my son. 
How are you? 
Cherished Dad. 
Thanks my son.
It's cold weather 
and there is also 
wind blowing. 
How much information 
do you have about 
kite flying?
My son, I was about
ten years old 
when I was flying kites.
Okay.
Then we would go to 
Sakhi Festivals, Danjaba, 
Tahmaba, and then there 
we would fly kites, and 
compete with them, 
and whoever became 
the champion, 
then he was so. Yeah.
Well, May God grant you 
health and harmony...
May He grant harmony 
to the whole 
Afghanistan… 
In Afghanistan 
the moment a kite falls 
to the ground, 
the boys catch and take it, 
and here, as much as 
we fly it, we go 
and take back our kite. 
The sky is full of 
kites and occupied, 
everyone is happy.
It’s green. 
May God make 
our country peaceful 
so that it’s green
and in peace. 
It raises the memories 
of youth. 
I was a little boy, 
we got the little frame 
of China Great Wall. 
I was always thinking 
about it, 
it is so beautiful to go 
and fly a kite and release. 
Look at the landscape 
of that Wall. 
You can release it 
as much as you can!  
But I never thought 
it’s going to happen. 
Four years ago, one day, 
I end up right on top 
of the Great Wall, 
and flying the kite, 
and I said, “Oh, God!” 
(Wow.) 
You see, never give up, 
always there is a door, 
always there is 
an opening. 
Always there is hope 
for the Afghan people. 
Thank you 
Mr. Basir Beria 
for the feelings of love, 
kindness, and happiness 
you impart in everyone 
through the special realm 
of the kites. 
We join in your wish 
that our world will 
come together in the 
same harmonious spirit 
of a kite festival.
I wish to every kid, and 
everybody in the world, 
to have a peaceful life.  
Be outside and fly a kite. 
As somebody says, 
“Go fly a kite!” 
give them a hug, 
don’t get upset. 
Just give them a hug and 
say, “Let’s go fly a kite.”
Noble viewers, we 
enjoyed your presence 
today on 
Enlightening Entertainment. 
Up next is 
Words of Wisdom, 
after Noteworthy News, 
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
May your heart be 
forever happy and free 
like a flying kite.
From the King…
Who reigns over kings,
The Holy One 
blessed is He 
Welcome. 
Naguila brings together 
Muslim and Jewish 
musicians and carries 
a message, the message 
of love and peace 
to the whole world.
Bless me for peace
O angels of peace, 
All are welcome here,
all who want to hear 
music of our fathers, 
music of the synagogue. 
Join us on Wednesday, 
July 21 and 28 
for a two-part series 
on Enlightening 
Entertainment, 
featuring the renowned 
Naguila Ensemble, 
a Judeo-Arabic band that 
harmoniously blends
the sacred music traditions 
of both cultures.