Pandavas

The Pandavas are five brothers and the protagonists of the Sanskrit epic of ancient India, Mahabharata. The Pandava Quartet revolves around the reincarnations of those five brothers.

History
When the archery teacher of the Pandavas, Dronacharya, assembled the brothers for a session, he tied a wooden fish to a tree branch. He instructed the brothers to shoot an arrow at the fish’s eye, but they could only aim by looking at the reflection of the wooden fish in the water below them. Dronacharya asked Yudhishthira what he saw in the reflection, he responded "The sky, the tree, the fish" but teacher told him not to shoot. Bhima said "The branch of the tree, the fish," but he was asked not to shoot too. Arjuna said "The eye of the fish", only he was allowed to shoot.

Yudhishthira
Yudhishthira was the son of Dharma Raja, the Hindu god of justice and death. The reincarnation of Yudhishthira is Yamini Kapoor-Mercado-Lopez.

Bhima
Bhima was the son of Vayu, the Hindu god of wind.

Arjuna
Arjuna was the son of Indra, the Hindu god of storms, thunder and lightning. The reincarnation of Arjuna is Aru Shah.

Nakula
Nakula, twin of Sahadeva, was the son of one of the Ashvins, the twin horsemen Hindu gods who symbolize sunrise and sunset and are considered the gods of medicine and healing.

Sahadeva
Sahadeva, twin of Nakula, was the son of one of the Ashvins, the twin horsemen Hindu gods who symbolize sunrise and sunset and are considered the gods of medicine and healing.

Trivia

 * The tale of Arjuna and the fish’s eye was about focusing and peeling away distractions one by one until all that was left was the target.