Culture
In touch with Eywa (Avatar-I)
The first Avatar movie (2009) became a phenomenal success soon after its release.
Beyond the magnificent graphics and the fantasy realm it created, the movie had also had additional attractions for Indians — the name itself and the bow-arrow wielding blue-skinned humanoids, who resembled Hindu deities.
The movie is set in a moon in Alpha Centauri star system, where a westernised corporate humanity is colonising another world. That world is named Pandora and it is mined for the mineral unobtanium.
On the planet, the humans meet a very forest-based blue-skinned humanoids — the 10-foot tall Na’vi.
While at one level the movie makes a statement against corporate development that destroys the tribal communities like in the Amazonian — at another level it is also a confessional statement of Western anthropology itself.
Western anthropology studies other cultures and civilisations — mining them for knowledge and that knowledge later becomes the basis for very physical colonialism.
Colonisers present themselves as a civilising force in the beginning. But when it finally comes to make the Na’vi abandon their way of life as well as spirituality — simply their Dharma — they use force.
Avatar is initially in the movie a corporate infiltration programme that involves a hybrid body and a human operator. At this point, it is villainous in the discourse of the storyline. But a transformed Avatar becomes the saviour of the tribe and one of the tribe — fulfilling in a way the original meaning of the term. Here, the Avatar becomes positive.
But the movie shows three aspects that are relevant from a Hindu point of view.
I — The Spiritual Roots
The first is about the network of the root systems that the ‘Tree of Souls’ possesses. They form an intelligent network which is also spiritual.
The colonisers call the floating mountain on which the tree stands as "Hallelujah Mountains". For them its real significance is the large deposit of unobtanium.
By renaming the floating mountain "Hallelujah Mountains" the colonisers give a semblance of respecting the divinity of the mountain but reduce it to a glory of a male sky god than a complete goddess in itself.
The Na’vi call the tree "Vitraya Ramunong" and it is the most sacred spot associated with Eywa, the goddess. One of the marines who had obtained the Avatar training explains what or who Eywa is:
The conceptualisation of an intelligent root system actually can be traced back to Charles Darwin and his botanist-son Francis Darwin.
Darwin stated that the tip of the radicle behaves like the brain in other animals. That was in 1880.
In 2009, the same year the movie came, a team of scientists, Baluska et al, revisited the root-brain hypothesis in the historical context as well as in the light of modern discoveries and had this to say:
So here the movie quite rightly identifies a physical and ecological connectivity. It then brings in the humanoids as evolving a spirituality that taps into this ecological connectivity.
Basically, this is also what Hindu Dharma is. It is not a constructed religion of dogmas and beliefs. It is an evolved natural religion of experience and diversity.
II — The Aggression and the Resistance
The 'Avatar' is an important technology. Again, it should not be considered as futuristic, though such a cybernetically connected and controlled genetic systems may well become a reality sooner than we think. This has already been happening right from the colonial times.
A colonial-evangelical ‘scholar’ dressed as a ‘native’ or posturing as being genuinely interested in ‘native’ spirituality, coming and mining knowledge is a well-known strategy wrought with disastrous consequences for the ‘natives’.
Even if they manage to reacquire their land rights often only partially, as a charity from the dominant Western civilisation, their spiritual traditions are completely destroyed and theo-colonial expansionism becomes irreversible.
The theo-colonial implants are the more effective controller systems than the ‘Avatar’ project shown.
The planet coming together and alive, to save herself is another scintillating climax scene in the movie. What is shown in a dramatic fantasy-filled way happens in real life in a very different manner.
Consider for a moment Ram Setu as a live organism. It has triggered through a series of sacred literature a sense of mystic belonging to it. So, when it got threatened, it reawakened the sacred memories and bhakti. It brought a network of human brains to argue for it — using Ramayana and Rama Bhakti.
None saved Ram Setu. Ram Sethu saved itself using us. We are its tools.
This is just a speculation. But more often the structures of sacred geography so integral to the organic being of a natural religion like Sanatana Dharma (perhaps the only surviving natural religion) gets protected through sacred lore.
Do they, who are millions of years older than humanity, infuse us with the sense of sacred to make us the tools of their protection?
That is a Dharmic thought worth pondering. That is also evolution at work.
III — The Falling Tree is Real
Finally, when I saw the ‘Tree of Souls’ the sacred tree fall, I cannot but remember an event recorded by a missionary administrator in my own place.
This passage is from Samuel Mateer’s account of what happened around 1860s in Kanyakumari district. Pandora and the Na’vi fights are not in the realm imaginal.