TV-Series
Description
Born Saigan Sachi in Tokyo on December 31, 1963, Sati Saigan was manipulated into believing herself the Buddhist messiah Miroku through a fabricated narrative by Fra YVS. After uncovering the deception, she rose to prominence within Daremoine while leading Gandhara, a pacifist Buddhist faction central to the Shaman Fight, dedicated to preventing Hao Asakura’s rise by uniting the Five Elemental Warriors and securing the Five Grand Elemental Spirits.

Distinguished by long red-brown hair, an orange dress, and a veiled Buddhist crown, she adopts a simple white dress casually. Renowned for her serenity, she avoids violence unless protecting others, driven by a belief in universal salvation through compassion. Her respectful nature surfaces in polite interactions, notably addressing Ryu as “Ryunosuke.”

Decades of training in Hell amplified her furyoku, enabling spirit alliances. Her initial guardian, Dainichi Nyorai—a Lucifer manifestation channeled through a Senju Kannon statue and later an armlet—granted resurrection, soul manipulation, and furyoku suppression. After releasing Dainichi to reunite him with Lucifer, she allied with Moloch during the Flower of Maize arc.

Key events include summoning Dainichi as a child to defend a temple, triggering her journey to India, where she founded schools, orphanages, and hospitals, galvanizing Gandhara’s formation. During the Shaman Fight, she revived Ryunosuke Umemiya and Chocolove McDonnell, intervened strategically in tournaments, and orchestrated Yoh Asakura’s Hell training by temporarily killing him. Betrayed by Hang Zang-Ching after confronting Enma Daioh, she briefly died before resurrection.

Post-tournament, she mentored Tamamura Tamao, disbanded Gandhara amid internal strife, and settled in India with Komeri and Nakaizumi Yakumo, later accepting Yakumo as a disciple. In the Flower of Maize arc, she resurrected Asakura Hana’s body and sought Tamao for a new team, signaling future collaboration.

Her evolution from a fiery child to a disillusioned yet composed leader reflects her complexity. A pacifist at heart, she reluctantly embraced strategic violence, balancing idealism with pragmatism against existential threats. Interactions with allies and adversaries alike underscored her steadfast commitment to saving humanity, navigating personal and ideological conflicts with resolve.