After Fire Lord Ozai banished her, Ursa, Zuko's mom in 'Avatar: The Last Airbender', returned to her hometown. In the comic spin-off 'The Search', it's discovered that a spirit erased her memory and gave her a new identity, until she was found by Zuko.
Ah, you're asking about one of the most intriguing mysteries from 'Avatar: The Last Airbender'—the story of Zuko's mom, Ursa. After she got banished from the Fire Nation by Fire Lord Ozai, her fate remained unknown in the TV series. However, in the comic titled 'The Search', you'll find an elaborate backstory. Ursa returns to her childhood village, where she encounters a spirit called the Mother of Faces. She asks the spirit to change her face and wipe her memory of her past, including the existence of Zuko and Azula, so she can live a quiet life. Under the new name, 'Noren', she marries her former beau, Ikem, and they have a new daughter, Kiyi. Nevertheless, when Zuko finally tracks her down, she accepts her past and regains her original face and memories.
You're asking about Ursa who we first met in ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’, right? It is revealed in the comic series ‘The Search’ that after her exile, she returns to her original home where a spiritual being gives her another chance at life and a new identity. She was made to forget her past, until she was finally found by her own children Zuko and Azula.
Zuko's mother, Ursa, in the animation series "Avatar: The Last Airbender" was thrown out of her house by her hsu-dyn-yu and subsequently vanishes into thin air like Hamlet's ghost. But with the opening of a new comic series Rider The Search', it turns out that she neither dies nor falls into poverty. Instead, she goes home and loses contact with her memory. In the end, Zuko and friends manage to find her again and together with the spirit wolf restore her memory completely.
There are a lot of things in Avatar that we don't know. For example, from Zuko's childhood on down almost no details about his mother are provided to us. However, that all changed with The Search.' A sequel comic series set in the same world as The Last Airbender and by its original creators, Michael DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, answered many questions readers had long since raised about what happened to Zuko's mom Ursa. After she was expelled by fire lord Papa Sozin, she returned to her hometown. In the spirit world, a spirit changed her name and took away all memory of the past generations. Her children Zuko and Azula met this spirit after they grew up and freed their mother from its influence (effect).
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Yet he never loved me — his first child, born of him and my mother.
As time went by, he visited my mother less and less frequently. Eventually, I passed away. Mother begged him to seek justice for me, but he only replied indifferently, "We shall have many more children."
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My mother hated me, to the point that she wished I were dead.
I knew I deserved to die.
Sixteen years ago, if I hadn’t insisted on going out, my brother wouldn’t have died while trying to save me.
Eventually, both of us got what we wished for.
I got brain cancer. She had become a stranger to me as I forgot everything and went to die in blissful ignorance.
Then, she went mad.
My mother-in-law got kidnapped, but my powerful husband, who ran both sides of the law, was too busy throwing a birthday bash for his old flame's dog.
The kidnappers warned them they'd kill her if he didn't show up.
I didn't beg him to act because, in my past life, I dragged him away from that party despite being eight months pregnant to save his mom.
His old flame, who tagged along, got spotted by the kidnappers' lookout. They assaulted her and brutally killed her. Her body parts were left to be eaten by dogs.
Furious, he gunned down the culprits and vanished for a month. When he returned, he never mentioned it.
Then I gave birth to our son and was full of joy. But he threw me into the woods, weak and defenseless. Wild animals tore me apart, leaving nothing behind.
"You were jealous of Alicia and had the kidnappers kill her?" he accused. "You don't deserve her happiness."
When I opened my eyes again, I was back to the day his mom got kidnapped.
Ever since my little brother died of a sudden high fever and Mom started spending all her time with Matthew Hunt, I started cutting her out of our family photos.
One day, Dad got a call from my teacher. She overheard me saying I lost my mom, and I wanted to borrow my classmate's mom instead.
Dad paused for a moment, then didn't correct me.
"Yeah," he said quietly. "She passed away early."
At the school's parent-child sports day, Dad saw me slip a cleaner ten dollars and ask her to be my mom for the day.
He didn't stop me. Instead, he handed her another 200 bucks and asked if she could attend the parent meeting, too.
After that, whenever something called for a mom, Dad let me go out and "hire" one.
It wasn't until much later that Mom realized she hadn't heard from us in a long time.
She canceled her meetings and came to pick me up from school herself. But at the gate, the teacher frowned and stopped her.
Confused, she went home. The moment she stepped inside, she heard me talking to the property manager.
"My mom's dead," I said. "Do you wanna be my new mom?"
The house was on fire.
My husband–a firefighter–rescued our son first. And the kitten his first love had left behind.
Then, to comfort the frightened woman, he rushed off without a second thought.
When his colleagues asked my son if anyone else was still inside, he glanced in my direction… and shook his head.
"There's no one else."
I was later found screaming for help, barely alive.
Outside my hospital room, my son looked at me with disappointment.
"Why didn't you just burn to death in there?
"If you were gone, Aunt Maya could be my mom."
Mom and Aunt Denise Taylor fell off the balcony in the midst of their heated argument.
Dad rushed in just as they hit the ground, each with a broken arm. Without hesitation, he left Mom behind and hurriedly took Denise to the hospital instead.
Later, Mom filed for divorce.
Dad's face twisted in anger as he yelled, "Enough, Nicole! So what if you broke an arm and can't hold a scalpel anymore? What's the big deal? Dee is a genius designer. If she had lost her hand, her life would've been over! Of course, I had to save her first!"
Watching all this in my ghostly state, I couldn't help but laugh. Did Dad really think that Mom had only lost the use of her hand?
Mom didn't just lose her hand.
She lost me.
After all, I had severe heart failure, and the only person who could perform the life-saving surgery was Mom, the medical master herself.
But none of that matters now, because I'm already gone.