The first major and most obvious influence is the use of the
four elements--Water, Earth, Fire, and Air.
In Buddhism these signify different aspects of the internal and external
world in and around us. In the world of
Avatar the elements are controlled by certain members in each of the four
nations i.e. the Water Tribe is the home of the Waterbenders, Earth Kingdom to
Earthbenders, Fire Nation to Firebenders, and Air Temples to Airbenders.
Each generation has a new reincarnation of the Avatar and
their duty is to keep balance in the world.
The main character Aang is the Avatar in this generation and when searching
for the Avatar among the Air Nomads, the head monks will conduct a test where
they have each child select toys or relics out of many. When Aang did this, he selected four
different items that were possessions of his past Avatar lives. The head monks then knew that he was the next
Avatar. This is similar to how the
Tibetan Monks search for the next Dalai Lama by asking him a series of
questions.
In the beginning of the second season, Aang and his friends
get trapped in a swamp where they meet the hermit Huu. Huu is a Waterbender who left his home in
search for spiritual enlightenment and found his way to the heart of this
particular swamp under a giant grove tree. Here he states that he did in fact
achieve spiritual enlightenment and felt the energy all around him and learned
that everything is connected. This
alludes to Prince Guatama’s own spiritual journey.
Another main influence is the entire nation of the Air
Nomads. Their whole culture is based heavily
on the Buddhist Monastic lifestyle.
There are four Air temples in each corner of this world and they are
separated by gender--male monks lived in the Northern and Southern temples
while female nuns lived in the Eastern and Western temples. Air is considered the element of freedom and
so those who bend it must spiritually detach themselves from the physical world
and free themselves of worldly troubles.
There are many more influences throughout the series; even
from other Eastern religions and I could write for days about this series for
it is one of my favorites. I find it
most interesting through a children’s TV show that we can learn about different
cultures such as this, even though it is at a very basic level of understanding
and could almost be passed over without viewers realizing it.
Justin,
ReplyDeleteThis is such an interesting post! The parallels are really incredible. I like that you gave such much detail in the ways that they were similar. That is really neat! Thanks again for your post!
I totally agree with Emily! For years I've seen commercials for the show, but I had no idea it had to do with Buddhism. I like how you could see the similarities and apply such an old philosophy to something that you really enjoy in our modern day society. Very cool.
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