The content of this page should be merged into the more general article Avatar/Banishment of the Nara as it is written.
When the Nara were banished to the Hanwang desert, the Earth Kingdom defined a "pale of banishment" to which they would be confined. This exile was on pain of death, and the Nara who went into exile were, additionally, branded with a δΊ‘ on their foreheads to make them more recognizable if they tried to leave the pale. Some Nara choose to fight to the last instead of going into exile. Others attempted to evade the exile. It is estimated that up to 20% of their population at the time of the exile edict chose to give up their identity and integrate with other Yonggan or Abka groups instead of fighting or obeying. Most were never caught, though some were; they were either executed or escorted to the pale, depending on the particular circumstances. It should be noted that the Nara were a numerous clan, with millions of members, and they were widely disseminated through the Earth Kingdom as a consequence of their centrality to the former Ri dynasty. Thus, rounding them up and exiling them took years, and waves of exiles were repeatedly turned out into the desert from far-flung parts of the Earth Kingdom. The number of exiled Nara vastly exceeded the carrying capacity of the Hanwang desert, which already had an indigenous population of sandbenders and others besides, leading to violent conflict and starvation. This outcome would have been the obvious result to the Hao Ting court at the time, and the majority of the exiled Nara perished within a short period of time after arriving.
Zones of the Pale
The Nara pale of banishment is comprised of two zones, the "zone of residence" and the "zone of transience." The zone of residence is where the Nara may permanently reside, without restriction. The zone of transience is an area on the margins of the pale, often including settlements and trading posts. The Nara are permitted to visit the zone of transience, e.g. to trade, but not to reside there; the specifics of what constitutes "residing" vary from settlement to settlement. Generally, the Nara are forbidden to camp in the zone of transience, and may not build, rent, or own dwellings there. Government trading posts simply have a curfew; the Nara are not allowed to be there at night.
Punishments for Defying Exile
Originally the exile was on pain of death, and was enforced by beheading any Nara caught outside the pale of banishment. More recently, infractions have been usually dealt with more leniently; first-time offenders are branded and returned to the pale and only flagrant repeated violators are executed. Nara violating the zone of transience regulations are generally just expelled, repeat offenders might be jailed briefly or flogged, depending on the circumstances and disposition of the governing authority.
Changes over Time
The boundaries of the pale, and in particular the zone of transience, were set so as to allow the Nara to trade (and hence be economically exploited), but not to avail themselves of the comfort of urban oasis life. Notably, most of the oases of the Hanwang, even deep within the desert, are enclaves of the zone of transience within the zone of residence. (It should be noted that enforcement of the prohibition on Nara residence within most of these enclaves was only sporadically enforced, as the Earth Kingdom's control over the Hanwang tribes has rarely been so complete as to interest them in the matter.) A few settlements have shifted and grown to such an extent that they now extend into the zone of residence, and indeed some Nara have taken advantage of this and settled there; the matter does not seem to be of much interest to the current government in Ba Sing Se.
Markings
The boundaries of the pale and its zones are marked with stele, concentrated in settlements and along common routes; the stele may be extremely far apart on the trackless borders of the Hanwang. The large stele contain a description of the zones, the penalties for defying exile, and, notably, a rather long and mean-spirited denunciation of the Nara, which appears in three languages - the Central Earth Kingdom common language, The Yonggan language (written one on side of the stele in common ideographic characters, and on the other in the Yonggan alphabetic script), and the Hanwang dialect.
- This is the written decree of the 41st Earth King:
In the days of the Great Hao and the Elder Ting, our Kingdom treated generously the Yonggan barbarians of the North, favoring them with great gifts and honoring their leaders with titles of nobility. Our illustrious collateral ancestor, the 15th Earth King, of the Elder Ting, honored the barbarian leader Nara Jaikan , so-called lord of lords, with the title of Duke Guarding the Northern Frontier and with great wealth. And yet, when rebels rose in the Impregnable City, and his majesty called on Nara Jaikan to assist in the suppression of the rebels, the Nara committed the most terrible crime imaginable: they m-rdered his majesty in treacherous collusion with the rebels. Furthermore, as if their odious and infamous act of treachery was not a sufficient offense to Heaven, the Nara desecrated the temples of the Kingdom with barbaric rites. Their hubris knowing no bounds, the sons of Jaikan even purported to ascend the Badgermole Throne, pretending themselves emperors and slaughtering those righteous people of the our Kingdom and vassal states who dared speak out against their blasphemy and usurpation. What is more, they impr-soned the royal family of the Elder Ting, who d-ed in exile in the frozen and desolate lands whence the Yonggan barbarians had emerged.
After some years in which the Nara plundered the bounty of our Kingdom and worked the people close to death with their brutal rule, the stench of their hubris and mismanagement reached Heaven. When the divine forbearance was exhausted, certain righteous scholar-officials, hitherto forced to labor under the Gr-at Ri Dynasty (as it was falsely so-called), were made to feel such indignation at the crimes of the Nara, and such sympathy for the suffering of the people, that they could not but rise against their corrupt and decadent barbarian overlords and cast off their illegitimate alien dominion. Accepting the Will of Heaven and the good council of the righteous scholar-officials, our illustrious ancestor the 23rd Earth King drove the Nara from the the Hall of Invincible Stability and expelled the Yonggan barbarians from the Impregnable City. His majesty purified the Ancestral Temples and visited righteous judgement upon the collaborators who had mistreated the people and enriched the Nara. In his great mercy, his majesty did not exterminate the wicked Nara, but allowed them to return peacefully to their own proper territory upon giving their submission, which they did. Indeed, as it is recorded in the Veritable Records of the 23rd Reign, the so-called Aisin-Nara Prince of Jin (= AISIN-NARA Bugan, 687-607 BG), prominent among the Yonggan and a great man of the deposed regime, groveled before the Badgermole throne for his wretched life and submitted to his majesty with three prostrations and nine knockings of the head; seeing this display of apparent contrition, his majesty, a ruler of great humanity, showed undeserved mercy by sparing his wayward subject and allowing him to return to his own ancestral land of Nemu with the dignity of a native beile.
Yet, despite the kindness of our illustrious ancestor, the Nara quickly forgot the mercy that had been shown to them, and proved unworthy of such consideration in the future; for when the rebel Qin, the so-called conqueror, rose against us in the late war, the treacherous Nara fomented some other Yonggan and Abka against the Kingdom and supported the violent rebellion. Though, by the Will of Heaven, these rebels were nonetheless defeated, the war was made bloodier and more protracted by Nara backstabbing. Once again, the stench of their vile crimes rises to Heaven and demands punishment in the name of justice, and to avenge the fallen myriads of the late war.
It would be just and appropriate to condemn the Nara to complete extermination, as time and again they have proven themselves to be a wicked and treacherous lineage devoid of human quality. Yet, we would not taint the honor of any of our righteous military forces by having them act as mere exterminators of verminous animals. Instead, we shall rely upon Heaven to mete out its righteous sentence upon these traitors.
Let it be known: We, by the Will of Heaven the 41st Earth King, hereby establish a pale of banishment in the Hanwang Desert in which the Nara must henceforth dwell. We banish the Nara from the remainder of the Earth Kingdom.
Further, let it be known: we confiscate all the real property of the Nara, including that associated with dowries, for the throne. We revoke all their fiefs and titles of nobility.
Further, let it be known: we condemn the entire Nara barbarian clan, along with their spouses, children, retainers and slaves, and all their descendants in perpetuity, to suffer the penalty of death should they ever leave the pale of banishment established for them.
Signed in council, 41st Earth King.
In the name of his majesty the 41st Earth King, by order of the Ministry of Works, this monument is established to mark the boundary of the zone of transience of the Nara pale of banishment.
