Brothers Of - The Wind

They are not siblings by blood, but by bond. The falcon and the hawk. The eagle and the vulture. The kite and the harrier. In every mythology that has ever cast its gaze skyward, these winged hunters appear as twins of a sort—one representing the sun’s fierce clarity, the other the shadowed wisdom of the ridge.

Falconers often speak of the "mews" (the bird's housing) as a place of quiet respect. The bond is forged through trust, food, and the shared thrill of the hunt. To watch a falconer release a peregrine falcon is to witness a moment of supreme tension and beauty. The bird climbs, stoops, and dives at speeds over 200 miles an hour. When it returns to the glove, there is a silent acknowledgment between species. We are different, the gesture says, but we hunt the same wind. Brothers of the Wind

Long before the 2015 film, the archetype of the "Wind Brothers" existed in the folklore of indigenous cultures around the world. These stories typically feature twin heroes or sibling spirits associated with storms, navigation, and seasonal change. They are not siblings by blood, but by bond

In ancient Chinese mythology, the god of wind is Feng Bo (Uncle Wind), often depicted as a winged creature. However, in Taoist revisions, Feng Bo is served by two brothers—the Youth of the Eastern Wind and the Officer of the Western Gale. These brothers ride cranes and disperse clouds. They are the silent Brothers of the Wind who bring the monsoons that flood the rice fields, vital for life. The kite and the harrier