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Revision as of 21:14, 2 August 2005 by Darien Shields (talk | contribs) (→Sin-Bound: Added in Kuramori's name, forgot to before.)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Haibane Renmei (灰羽連盟), translated by the author as Charcoal Feather Federation, is a set of original doujinshi written and illustrated by Yoshitoshi ABe. It is also the name of an anime series based on them. They follow a young girl named Rakka, a newly arrived angelic-looking being (called Haibane), and other characters in the city of Glie (guri), a walled city with no apparent exit.
Characters
- Rakka ("Falling"): A new arrival to the Old Home, Rakka struggles throughout the episode to find herself, and has trouble escaping from curiosity of her past. She forms many friendships, but her closest is that with Reki.
- Reki ("Pebble"/"Small Stones"): Always smiling and being kind to the other Haibane, Reki - one of the most senior Haibane in the home - is troubled by her past and by her dreams.
- Kuu ("Sky"): The youngest of the "older" Haibane, Kuu overcame initial awkwardness to achieve a sense of peace. She develops a good friendship with Rakka.
- Nemu ("Sleep"): The oldest Haibane at the home, she is often teased for her habit of sleeping in.
- Kana ("River fish"): A mechanically inclined tomboy, she works at the clock tower in the center of town.
- Hikari ("Light"): A serious, but occasionally mischievous haibane. She works in a bakery in town.
- Hyouko ("Icy lake"): The leader of another group of Haibane in town (the "co-educational" Abandoned Factory nest). At some point in the past, he and Reki were romantically involved.
Plot Summary
The series starts out with two scenes. One contains the image of a girl falling from the sky, cradling a crow; it tries to stop her fall, but cannot. The other consists of a group of Haibane finding a large cocoon growing in a storage room. When the cocoon breaks open, the teenage girl inside is brought to the guest room, where she is cared for by several Haibane, most notably one named Reki. All the girl can remember is her dream of falling; as older Haibane are named by their dream from within the cocoon, she is named Rakka. Shortly after arriving, Reki helps Rakka go through the painful ordeal of having wings grow from her back, meticulously cleans her wings for many hours, and the Haibane present Rakka with a halo.
As time progresses, she learns her way around the Old Home, one of two places in the city where Haibane live. She learns about the town, in which the people are friendly and generous to the Haibane, but in which Haibane must work and are subject to restrictive rules with harsh penalties. Foremost of these is to not touch or even approach the wall that surrounds the town.
As Rakka begins to bond with her friends - most notably Reki and another Haibane named Kuu - she begins to search for a job. However, amidst this, Kuu grows distanced. One day, Kuu disappears in the western forest near the wall in beams of light. Rakka becomes distraught when she learns that Kuu, like all Haibane eventually who carry no guilt, passed over the wall and will never return.
Rakka becomes depressed, and notices her wings turning black. Despite desperate attempts to curb and conceal it by cutting her feathers, Reki discovers this and shows Rakka how to hide and treat the spots. Rakka learns that she is "sin-bound", caught up in guilt for past deeds. Reki reveals that she was born with this condition, with black wings and a dark dream she could not fully remember, and has been hiding it ever since. Depressed and confused about her condition, Rakka later runs off in despair, then is led into the western woods by crows. There she finds a well, climbs to the bottom, sees her full dream, and buries a dead crow found at the bottom of the well. Somehow she knows it was a person who loved her in her past life, who then became a bird to pass over the wall and let her know she was not alone. Finding closure and forgiveness for her sins, her guilt is relieved and her wings turn gray again. She also learns that Reki's time is running out, however, and turns her focus towards helping her friend find her way.
Rakka works to get another group of Haibane from the other side of the city to forgive Reki for a long past transgression in which she tried to pass over the wall and got her boyfriend almost killed and severely punished for damaging it. However, Reki is resigned to her fate; she refuses to trust anyone for fear of betrayal, and will not ask for or accept help. Her dream is revealed to her as a gift from the Haibane Renmei, but its destructive nature only serves to drive her into a self-loathing frenzy. As Rakka tries to shake her out of it, Reki reveals to Rakka that she never really cared for her, and was just taking care of her as a final effort to save herself.
Rakka leaves her, crushed, but finds and reads Reki's diary. From it, and from the forgotten memories it reveals, Rakka discovers that Reki spent so long performing good deeds for forgiveness that it has become her identity, even if she cannot see it. Realising that Reki truly did care and wanted someone to trust, Rakka's belief in Reki is restored, and she returns to save her friend from the dark fate of a sin-bound.
Haibane
The Haibane are a race of people who resemble angels in that they have wings and haloes. However, their wings are short, not functional, and rather than white they are Charcoal Grey. Furthermore, their haloes are built for them by the Haibane Renmei, although it is likely the case that they can still only be worn by a Haibane.
Haibane are born from cocoons that grow from small seeds that appear in Old Home (in all the depicted cases they infact grow in uninhabitted rooms). In the introduction sequence to the anime the seed of Rakka is seen falling from the sky, so it is possible that all the cocoon seeds fall from the sky this way. Once in Old Home they dig into the floor and grow at a tremendous rate to a very large size much bigger than a person (although Kana indicates that Rakka's cocoon is bigger than Kuu's. Presumably, therefore, the size of the cocoon is indeed linked to the size of the Haibane inside). Veins/roots grow out of the cocoon into the surrounding surfaces to support it. The cocoon is filled with liquid but the Haibane inside can breath it.
Inside the cocoon a Haibane exists- fully formed and human in appearance (and also dressed in a simple white robe). It is unknown whether the person in the cocoon grows with it until they reach their correct size, or if they only appear when the cocoon is big enough to hold them. While in the cocoon the Haibane sleeps and has a dream- many fans believe the dream reflects how they died (see bellow). When they wake up from the dream they must dig their way out of the cocoon (it is a Haibane tradition; it is believed if they cannot break free themselves (rather than having their cocoon broken open) they will not be strong).
All Haibane are born as children or teenagers.
Haibane have no memory of their lives before being in the cocoon (although all are sure that they had lives before that), although Rakka manages to remember some details of her emotions in her previous life.
All older Haibane are named after their cocoon dream. Younger Haibane have less respect for this tradition, and try to pick their own names- like things they want to be when they grow up.
After a Haibane "hatches" they are given a halo which is put over their head. The halos are made of a special metal-like substance, and are solid. They glow brightly. They hover over the Haibane's head like a repelled magnet, although exert a physical force on the Haibane (as sometimes Haibane can be pulled around by their Halo). The Halo is not always fixed very well when first applies to a Haibane. In the case of Rakka she had to connect hers to a headband with wire so that it wouldn't fall off at first, but before long it becomes fixed. When a Haibane's Day of Flight approaches their halo flickers.
A little while after a Haibane "hatches" (about a day, at the most) they start to grow their wings- which first form as lumps on their backs before their wings painfully break through. Their wings must be cleaned of blood and fluid, otherwise they will stain. It's a very long procedure to clean them thoroughly, and another Haibane must perform is as the newly born Haibane are too weak after the wings grow through. At first the wings are delicate and very hard to control, as well as being prone to exhaustion, but eventually become fully like part of the Haibane's body.
Haibane are not allowed to use money, and instead are given a notebook by the Haibane Renmei, leaving notes (similar to cheques) to pay for things, which are presumably exchanged for legal tender with the Haibane Renmei, or the Haibane's employer.
Haibane can only have second hand things or things they make themselves, it is considered to be their responsibillity to use things that humans no longer need.
Haibane must find employment, although they are only allowed to work in a few places. As mentioned above, they cannot handle money, but their work presumably pays for what they need.
After a certain amount of time (when they are fully prepared) a Haibane will become drawn towards the Western Woods for their "Day of Flight", when they pass over the wall in a beam of light. Most fans believe this is them ascending to heaven. Their halo is left behind, but does not glow.
Sin-Bound
Template:Spoiler Some Haibane do not remember their cocoon dream properly and are called "Sin-Bound". They also have black marks on their wings. Fans conjecture that these Haibane committed suicide in their past lives- this would definately appear to be the case with Reki, and her complete dream seems to indicate this, as do Rakka's memories of her past life.
Not all Sin-Bound Haibane are born with black marks on their wings; Rakka initially has normal wings, but when she becomes depressed over Kuu's departure the black marks start to appear.
Sin-Bound Haibane cannot have their "Day of Flight" until they are no-longer Sin-Bound. If they do not achieve this within a certain amount of time, they cease to be Haibane. The Haibane Renmei communicator says that their wings will fall out and they will lose their Haloes, and have to live apart from humans and Haibane (the camera at this point focusses on his faux wings, indicating that the Haibane Renmei are presumably these Haibane who could not have a "Day of Flight"). Reki believed though, that when her time ran out she would vanish. It is possible that normal Haibane can fail to have a "Day of Flight", and become Haibane Renmei, while Sin-Bound Haibane simply vanish.
Reki can make medicine to hide the dark spots on a Sin-Bound's wings, although this is only really any use for hiding the truth. She was taught by Kuramori who in turn was taught by the Haibane Renmei communicator.
Sin-Bound Haibane usually feel guilty about their previous life, and until they can overcome this they cannot become a normal Haibane. It also seems that they cannot do so without outside help: Rakka needed absolution from the crow in her dream, and Reki, once remembering her dream, had to ask for Rakka's help.
Context and Interpretation
Some fans have made the conjecture that the Haibane are, actually, children of our world who committed suicide and were reborn into this world to atone for their sin. Suicide is also a particularly high-profile issue in Japanese society, and some facts could support this hypothesis, like Reki's hallucination in the last episode, or an interpretation of the characters names ("Sleep", sleeping pills or coma; "Light", died in a fire; "Ice Lake", frozen; "River fish", drowning; "Falling", suicide by jumping...). ABe is reported to have denied this idea, but still encourages readers and viewers to come to their own conclusions.
A common variation of the above interpretation is the idea that all Haibane were simply children who died before their time; in this case, their names may simply represent the cause of death. Reki and Rakka's black wings and the Washu's reference to their sins are then assumed to be ways of showing that they committed suicide in their past lives. Some proof of this was the trouble both Reki and Rakka had in remembering details of their cocoon dreams. None of the other Haibane mentioned similar troubles.
Both interpretations suggest that the Haibane exist in a world between Heaven and Hell. Though they bear wings and halos as per traditional angels, the wings are not fully functional, and rot if the owner believes he or she has sinned. The time between arrival and departure suggests that their souls, while good-natured, are not ready to enter heaven due to something they have not learned, experienced, or atoned for. While superficially similar to the Catholic concept of Purgatory, the most notable difference is that a future in Heaven is not guaranteed; the potential fate of sin-bound Haibane such as Reki suggests that some may never ascend.
In an interview in the magazine Animerica, ABe stated that the series was inspired by Haruki Murakami's novel Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World, which takes place half in a walled city with no apparent outside. Some fans believe the series contains influence from another Murakami novel, The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, in which the main character spends a large amount of time at the bottom of a well.
External links
- Haibane Renmei (official site)
- An analysis of the sign language used in Haibane Renmei
- Comments on Haibane Renmei
- A large collection of sheet music for the major themes in Haibane Renmei
- A Haibane Renmei shrine with character bios, desktops, analysis, and more