Bleach: Everything to Know About Zommari Rureaux

Zommari Rureaux
Zommari Rureaux (Image Credits: Studio Pierrot)

In Bleach, supernatural battles between strong forces in the anime can be used as an allegory of an ideological battle, identity, and growth. The Arrancar, Hollows that have lost their masks and also acquired Shinigami's powers, are featured in the Hueco Mundo and Fake Karakura arcs, and perform an important role in both. These creatures, at least the Espada ones, are not just bad guys but the representations of human fears and instincts.

The Espada are the elite guards of Aizen, and each one of them symbolizes one of the facets of death. Their confrontation with the heroes not only involves brute force but also determination, moral, and emotional stamina.

Zommari Rureaux, the Séptima (7th) Espada in Bleach, symbolizes the idea of intoxication, which is emotional, spiritual, and egotistical. Although lacking in raw power compared to other members of the Espada, Zommari is characterized by distinctive powers and philosophy about what constitutes superiority. The fact that he is in Bleach shows that arrogance and unthinking obedience can be quite a destructive element, even in a very orderly military-like hierarchy.

Unlike certain of the more fight-softened or hatred-addled Espada of Bleach, Zommari Rureaux keeps his head uncommonly cool and queenly. He believes that he is the pinnacle of speed, possessing the quickest Sonido of any of the Espada. He is also composed, but with a strong mocking attitude.

Rureaux is confident that Hollows are superior to Shinigami and that Aizen, a mastermind antagonist of Bleach, is divine. This is what drives his intense loyalty, later engaging him in a dramatic and ultimately lethal clash with Captain Byakuya Kuchiki when the invasion of Hueco Mundo takes place.

Zommari Resurreccion is called Brujeria, meaning witchcraft. His body undergoes radical changes when activated, and he grows fifty eyes all over his arms and legs. With these eyes, he can employ a skill known as Amor, where he can control the parts of the body that these eyes look at. This capability is particularly hazardous since it follows conventional fighting.

Zommari controls Rukia Kuchiki's body with Amor, making her a possible threat to her brother, and this highlights his guile and dirty fighting style. This is used as both spectacle and character in Bleach.

Zommari shouts his praise to Aizen as he dies (Image Credits: Studio Pierrot)
Zommari shouts his praise to Aizen as he dies (Image Credits: Studio Pierrot)

Zommari Rureaux eventually loses to Byakuya Kuchiki despite his scary powers. Their fight in Bleach is much more than simply a test of strength — it is a conflict of ideologies. Zommari blames Soul Reapers for being inhumane and hypocritical to kill Hollows and labels Byakuya as a murderer. Byakuya denies his line of reasoning, though, telling him that all he guards is what is precious to him: His pride and what he loves. In his last moments, Zommari is seen shouting praises to Aizen, an indication of how blind his loyalty has made him.


Zommari Rureaux's Role in the Bleach Manga

Zommari's appearance in the Bleach manga is comparatively short-lived, but theme-wise significant. His position parallels the shortcomings of blind devotion and the perils of self-righteousness. His death is literal and symbolic, the death of uncontrolled pride and fanaticism. The manga places a particular importance on his fall as a point of change, not only as a narrative impetus, but also as a manifestational point of the wider philosophical premises of the series itself.

Zommari encounters Byakuya (Image Credits: Studio Pierrot)
Zommari encounters Byakuya (Image Credits: Studio Pierrot)

Zommari is not seen in the subsequent arcs in the manga and ends up without resurrection or after-epilogue closure. His loss, however, entrenches the thought that with might comes folly. He is the only one of the very few Espada who tries to camouflage their fight by ideology and fights — thus, his character stands out intellectually, although he leaves in the early parts of the game. He is still mentioned in fandom chat concerning the underused characters and Espada philosophies.

Though Zommari does not feature in the epilogue war arc (as of existing releases) in Bleach or the anime adaptation of the arc (the Thousand-Year Blood War), he has his legacy. He tends to be compared to other characters who evolved out of their original ideologies, like Grimmjow or Ulquiorra. The opposite is true in the case of Zommari — he is too rigid to change, which is his undoing. He does not know where others do — he acts as a theme himself and a symbol of warning to the large world of Bleach.


Zommari Rureaux's character proves how pride, loyalty, and ideology can be used not only as a tool to formulate a combat strategy but can also be used as a means of self-destruction. Being the 7th Espada, he added a new result to the formula of battles and a philosophical position to the distrusting Byakuya with his pure pragmatism. Although he did not play a significant role in Bleach, his character was necessary in ideological opposition that enriched the Hueco Mundo narrative and emphasized the fear of fanaticism.

Zommari has always been that potent reminder of conviction that shuns introspection and reflection, an important reminder that strength in Bleach is an equal part of mental view as it is an aspect of brute force.

Edited by Amey Mirashi