![]() I don't think they're showing us all their bonding moments, but perhaps they should show more. Sara and Amaya did go off to drink together at the conclusion of the crossover. Give me a mission with Sara, Amaya and Mick. I was hoping to see more bonding with Mick and Sara since it's not based in romance it's based in respect. Women can be friends with other women and with men. We have so much focus on on Bromances that I'm getting sick of it. A Captain that's whole deal is fighting for woman that are being oppressed by men. Now she's on a team from her future with a female Captain. ![]() She's from a time where women were pushed in the background and couldn't be in leadership positions. Vixen has so much potential and she should be spending her time with Sara not with Mick. The rest of the female characters on all the shows don't get that treatment. I truly believe the only reason Sara is different because they write her more like a male character that happens to be a woman. All they know how to do is write them as love interests or talking about love interests. Writing for women has always been the biggest issue with all these CWDC shows. What if Amaya goes back to her time period, and returns to her village, already pregnant with a fellow Wave Rider's child? So if Amaya winds up going to Africa to use the totem to help her ancestral Zambezi village, it would tie in perfectly. In Season 1 of the animated series, it was established that Mari's early childhood was in Africa, her mother had the totem before her, and that she effectively came to the USA as a refugee of sorts (the African landscape depicted looked an awful lot like the Kenyan desert backcountry we saw in Survivor: Africa, many years ago). But I have not seen the animated series so I have no idea about what goes on there. Maybe she ends up being Mari's mother instead of grandmother. Maybe Vixen does go back to a time, but not 1940. So it's possible time was changed so there's no granddaughter Vixen. In 2018, due to the Legends' intervention, the village was saved by Amaya and Esi and is protected by sisters Kuasa and Mari, who share the role as its protector.It's hard to say now because Obsidian told Amaya that they haven't seen her since she left with the Legends in 1940s, so presumably she doesn't make it back, or she goes into hiding. After successfully taking the Totem, Kuasa was worshiped by locals until Mari, encouraged by the Totem's spirits, was able to reclaim it. Kuasa kidnapped Mari and brought her back to Zambesi in order to take the Anansi Totem, which was now bonded to her. Many years later, Kuasa considered it her duty to continue protecting the village, though it remained empty. Esi attempted to hold them off with the Anansi Totem, but was forced to escape with her younger daughter, Mari and the Totem before Eshu destroyed the village, accidentally leaving behind Kuasa. ![]() Soon after a local warlord, Benatu Eshu, raided the village, killing almost everyone, including Amaya and her son-in-law, who had tried to stand up to the invaders. In 1992, Amaya's granddaughter Kuasa was named as the next guardian of the Totem at four years of age after Esi rejected her destiny as the next totem bearer. In her adulthood, Amaya Jiwe began protecting the village as the guardian of the Anansi Totem, taking on the mantle from her mother and grandmother. ![]() She passed on the knowledge and traditions of the village to her daughter, Mary while enslaved on the Collins Plantation, Mary encountered a guardian of the Totem, Amaya Jiwe, who freed her and several of her fellow slaves. Sometime prior to 1863, an unidentified woman was born in the village before being sold into slavery. The totem was passed down through generations to a new guardian, who was chosen at a very young age. Inhabitants of the village guarded the Anansi Totem for many generations after it was gifted to their warrior, Tantu, by the spider-god Anansi. ![]()
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