If you like, there is significant discussion of all these issues and more at
Sekai no Hajimari, the ultimate Haibane Renmei page.
" wrote:- Does the wall represent temptation? Since it should never be touched and those who do are punished.
I've not associated it with temptation so much as a barrier -- consider it sort of like the Ark of the Covenant (touch it, you die). It is set apart ("holy") because it is the barrier between the Haibane and some sort of reality they aren't supposed to mess with.
" wrote:-they say the bird in the well came in that form, so possibiliy it was human from where Rakka used to live? Or since it was "someone precious" and ended up forgiving her, could it have been God?
There are two theories on this, I tend to subscribe to the first. That one says that the bird was someone who loved Rakka (even though Rakka didn't know it), and may have even died trying to help her -- but at least intervened to let her know she was loved. That realization was what led to Rakka's forgiveness, the shedding of her sin-bound condition (
tsumitsuki).
Other people hold the bird was Reki. Reki talked to Rakka in the cocoon, and let her know she wasn't alone. In a sort of karma-istic twist, of course, Rakka becomes Reki's bird (she even says so right before she goes into Reki's studio -- "I'll be the bird who saves Reki"). I don't like this as much, as it doesn't quite address Rakka's true problem -- the feeling that she should be erased from existence (e.g. the suicidal nature). Knowing that someone from her previous life cared for her was essential to her recovery.
" wrote:-When Haibane have those dreams I noticed a pattern: seems like they all end up showing how the person died (ice lake, river, falling, rocky pebbles on train tracks) so when Rakka felt lonely and "didn't want to be a part of the world" in her former life, did she try to commit suicide and ended up falling with the "precious person" trying to help her from dying? Since she ended up being sin-bound because of Kuu, seems like it also parallels her former life.
Great catch! Indeed, I too believe the cocoon dreams have something to do with each Haibane's death.
Whether Rakka is a suicide is a matter of pretty intense debate. I personally think she died accidentally, but wouldn't argue strenuously if someone insisted on suicide. I believe Rakka' death had something to do with water (from clues in Ep 1 - the tunnel of light under water; Ep 4 - the smell of the river reminds her of something; Ep 8 - the dream she has at the bottom of the well suggests a watery death; and the closing credits, where she is floating in water before she's become a Haibane).
But as I said above, I think this other person may have tried to save her, and may have perished in the process. Very often rescuers drown alongside the victims.
And, yes, you caught the Kuu parallel: in Rakka's former life she felt alone and abandoned; then when Kuu had her Day of Flight, she felt the same abandonment, to the point where she began making the same mistakes -- leading to her becoming sin-bound.
" wrote:...cutting...
I think I mentioned it when we were talking about the "most intense episodes" thread.
Cutting is self-destructive. Rakka and Reki, both sin-bound Haibane, show these and other self-destructive behaviors -- Reki smokes, for example. Ultimately, the worst self-destruction is almost achieved by Reki in the last episode, and is a replay of her suicide in her previous life.
Such a cool series... you can watch it over and over, and see something new every time...